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Meddling Chombo meets his match

Zim Standard

      BY OUR STAFF

      MUTARE - Ignatious Chombo, the Minister of Local Government who
has played havoc with elected local authorities, could have his wings
clipped, The Standard understands.

      Manicaland Governor, Tinaye Chigudu, says President Robert
Mugabe has ordered the reinstatement of the Saruchera Commission that Chombo
fired in March.

      An apparently disappointed Chigudu said the directive is yet to
be complied with, two months after it was issued, leading to confusion in
the eastern border town.

      Chigudu told The Standard Mutare residents were not happy with
the way the commissioners had been fired by Chombo who has maintained a
tight grip on local authorities in Zimbabwe.

      Chombo dismissed commissioners, sworn into office three days
earlier, on reasons still to be made public. These were John Gwitira, Abiot
Maronge, Ellen Gwaradzimba, Victor Mazengero and Henry Nemaire.

      He also demoted the commission chairman Kenneth Saruchera to the
post of deputy chairman responsible for public works.
      Chombo then appointed new commissioners and a new chairman,
Fungai Chaeruka.

      The Standard understands that Chombo claimed Saruchera had
"failed to stamp out factionalism" which was besetting the city council.

      But unhappy with the way Chombo was handling the issue, Chigudu,
who is the resident Minister in Manicaland sought an audience with Mugabe.

      Chigudu said: "Here (Manicaland) I represent the President. I
have a duty to report to him what I see on the ground and in this case I
briefed him about the way the commissioners had been fired by the minister.

      "The President said to me: 'leave the Saruchera commission in
place. Leave it as it is.' And this is the position that should prevail on
the ground."

      The governor said, as a result, he only recognised the ousted
commission led by Saruchera, a veteran educationist and businessperson and
not the one in place at the moment.

       Chigudu added: "I am abiding by that until I get further
instructions from a superior authority, the head of state or the Vice
President. I know that the Saruchera commission should remain in place and
that is the commission I should work with.

      "Just yesterday there was a meeting in Mutare with people
complaining about the way the minister had handled the issue. "There is
greater confusion than before and people are not happy."

      Chombo could not be reached for comment for the past fortnight.
Yesterday people at his home told The Standard Chombo had gone to Banket on
farming business.

      However, Presidential spokesperson George Charamba said
yesterday he was not aware of Mugabe's directive.


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MPs linked to plot to oust Mugabe

Zim Standard

      By Nqobani Ndlovu

      BULAWAYO -  MPs hatched a plan to force President Robert Mugabe
together with the speaker of Parliament, John Nkomo, and Vice-President
Joseph Msika to leave office during a parliamentary session in 2004, the
High Court heard last week.

      Virginia Ndlovu, a member of the Zanu PF Tsholotsho District
Co-ordinating Committee, told the High Court that Nkomo revealed that the
November 2004 Dinyane prize-giving ceremony was meant to strategise Mugabe's
ouster along with that of Nkomo and Msika.

      She said this under cross-examination by defence lawyer, Francis
Chirimuuta of Gula-Ndebele & Partners, in a $2 billion defamation lawsuit
filed by former Information Minister, Jonathan Moyo, against Nkomo and
politburo member, Dumiso Dabengwa.

      Moyo is suing Dabengwa and Nkomo for allegedly telling Mugabe
that he (Moyo) plotted a coup against Mugabe and other senior ruling party
leaders.

      Ndlovu said Nkomo, who is also the Zanu PF national chairman,
made this disclosure during a meeting of the Tsholotsho DCC held last year
on 12 January.

      The revelation corroborated the minutes of the meeting that Moyo
read in court last Thursday as evidence.

      Ndlovu said in support of Moyo: "People were surprised after
Nkomo said Dinyane was meant to stage a parliamentary coup where Nkomo and
Msika were to be ordered by Parliament to step down during the first phase
and in the second phase President Mugabe was also to be ordered to step
down."

      When Chirimuuta suggested that her allegations were serious,
Ndlovu said: "I remember him saying that. It was something said publicly and
as I said before, the room was three quarters full.

      "Nkomo said it is apparent we did not know what we were doing.
'You were exploited, led by the nose by a mafikizolo. My children you were
almost dragged into a pit. The whole thing was planned before hand.'"

      Ndlovu told the High Court that the DCC meeting was meant to
explain to the national chairman what had transpired at Dinyane High School
in November 2004, now called the Tsholotsho Declaration.

      However, Ndlovu said Nkomo told them their explanations were not
adequate.

      Moyo, who is the independent MP for Tsholotsho, last year,
dragged Nkomo and Dabengwa to court saying they defamed him at the DCC
meeting.

      The former information Minister says the two claimed that he had
hatched a coup against Mugabe and other top cabinet ministers using foreign
funding.

      However, Nkomo and Dabengwa are denying the charge.

      High Court Judge Francis Bere is presiding over the defamation
case that opened Tuesday. The trial continues tomorrow with Moyo expected to
call in more witnesses. Job Sibanda of Job Sibanda and Associates is
representing Moyo.


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Students in trouble for insulting Mugabe

Zim Standard

      By our staff

      SIXTEEN Bindura University students will remain in custody until
26 May following their arrest for allegedly insulting the President and the
Minister of Higher and Tertiary Education during a demonstration, The
Standard has established.

      According to court papers, the students are being accused of
denouncing Stan Mudenge and President Robert Mugabe before demonstrations
erupted at the university.

      The students, including ZINASU secretary general Beloved
Chiweshe, are being charged with contravening Section 19 (1) and Section 24
of the Public Order and Security Act (POSA).

      Part of the police charge sheet against the students reads:
"During the address, the accused denounced Cde Mudenge, the minister of
Higher and Tertiary Education, as a sick person who cannot address their
problems. They said he had . and suffered of old age. They also said the
President was from a poor family and only got educated because of the church
he attended."

      After the address, police say, the accused led students on a
march along Mt. Darwin road towards Bindura without notifying authorities.

      The charge sheet also says that: "The accused persons were
observed by the police while carrying out their unlawful demonstration and
were dispersed."

       Bindura Magistrate Lazarus Murendo on Thursday denied the
students bail and remanded them in custody to 26 May, arguing that the
police needed time to investigate.

      However, Aleck Muchadehama of Mbidzo, Muchadehama & Makoni Legal
Practitioners, who is representing the students, said the magistrate erred
when he denied his clients bail.

      "We have made an urgent High Court bail application. The
Magistrate argued that there is still chaos at the college and if released
my clients may commit other offences but that is completely wrong because we
don't know who burnt that building," said Muchadehama, referring to a block
at the university, which was torched last week.

      Police have since arrested 39 students in connection with the
burning of a building, which occurred after the arrest of the first 16
students.

      Although forensic tests are yet to be conducted to ascertain the
cause of the fire, university officials have since ruled out any electrical
faults and are accusing the students of arson.

      Zanu PF officials have pointed fingers at the opposition MDC.

      But sources from Bindura said students were calling on the
government to review tuition and examination fees, which students argue are
beyond the reach of many.


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Minister quizzed over new economic plan

Zim Standard

       BY WALTER MARWIZI

      A government official last week failed to provide a clear time
frame when Zimbabweans can expect to see the results of the latest economic
rescue programme.

      This left industrialists unconvinced that the National Economic
Development Priority Programme (NEDPP) could help lift Zimbabwe out of its
economic crisis.

      Determined to clear the air over the programme, the
Confederation of Zimbabwe Industries (CZI) on Thursday organised a luncheon
where Samuel Undenge, the Deputy Minister of Economic Development, was
provided an opportunity to explain how NEDPP could turn around the country's
economic fortunes.

      Undenge repeated government claims that before the end of the
year the crisis facing the Zimbabwe economy would be over.
      But unimpressed industrialists would not let him off the hook.

      One said: "Honourable deputy minister, can you tell us when we
can start seeing the results? Yes, we have been listening, but we are going
back still in the dark, when can we see the results?"

      Undenge, with a straight face, said: "Expect results anytime.
All the areas of concern are addressed. The programme is not about talking
but delivering results. We will talk less and results will speak for
themselves."

      The deputy minister said by the end of the year, "things will
have changed for the better, which is the essence of the programme".

      Mashonaland Chamber of Industries President Chester Mhende,
however, said for the economy to work, distortions in the pricing of
utilities and public goods had to be removed as a matter of urgency.

      He said price controls on power imports for example meant that
the power utility would not be able to pay for imports.

      This would, in turn, result in erratic supplies of power to
industry and the country as a whole.

      Mhende said:  "We believe that subsidies should be targeted at
the final consumer and distortions eliminated such that there is pricing
stability and viability which spurs confidence, investment and increases
productivity. It is our conviction that farmers and government for instance
should pay the full cost of fuel and get rid of distortions, which are
inherent in the fuel sector."

      Undenge however said farmers would continue to receive
subsidies.

      Government announced NEDPP a month ago saying it had specific
objectives of reducing inflation, stabilising the currency, ensuring food
and foreign currency generation, among other things.

      A Cuban style high-level committee, the Zimbabwe National
Security Council chaired by President Robert Mugabe, formulated the economic
programme aimed at stabilising the economy by the end of the year.

      There are a string of committees charged with implementing
programme objectives in a move which appears to render Zimbabwe's 31
ministries redundant.


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'Lack of rule of law fuels graft'

Zim Standard

      BY OUR STAFF

      ABSENCE of the rule of law and poor governance are fuelling
corruption with senior government and Zanu PF officials becoming immune to
prosecution, Transparency International Zimbabwe (TIZ) has said.

      Speaking during a seminar on The State of Corruption in Zimbabwe
on Tuesday, TIZ chairman Dr Goodwill Shana, said corruption in the country
was being justified "as a political strategy and patronaged for political
protection".

      He expressed concern that government officials implicated or
convicted in corruption cases continued to be recycled in positions of
authority.

      "Involvement in corruption appears to have enhanced their
political careers, not damaged them," said Shana without mentioning names.

      He continued: "We need to change the model of governance
practised in our nation as it has played a significant part in creating
political patronage, immunity and impunity to perpetrators of crime and
corruption."

      Shana cited several instances where senior government officials
were implicated in corruption but went scot-free. The most notable cases are
the War Victims' Compensation Fund scandal, Grain Marketing Board scandal,
VIP Housing fraud, the Harare Airport Tender and Willowgate affair.

      The First Lady, Grace Mugabe, was mentioned as among those who
benefited from the pay-for-your-house scheme. Police Commissioner Augustine
Chihuri, Vice President Joice Mujuru, benefited from the war victims'
compensation fund.

      As a result of politics of patronage, Shana said, national
institutions such as Parliament, the judiciary, law enforcement and civil
society had lost autonomy, professionalism and accountability to the nation
for service delivery.

      Sylvester Maunganidze, the permanent secretary in the Ministry
of State Enterprises, Anti-Corruption and Anti-Monopolies, who spoke at the
same seminar, admitted that corruption was prevalent in the country. He
however denied that government was protecting corrupt officials.

      Maunganidze said: "Indeed, certain elements in government are
corrupt and the President said as much in his independence address. It
(corruption) requires an unequivocal national commitment and inter-agency
partnership across the social divide to fight it."


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Another cold winter for clean up victims

Zim Standard

      BY CAIPHAS CHIMHETE

      EXACTLY a year after the internationally condemned "Operation
Murambatsvina" thousands of people who were left homeless by the exercise
face yet another cold winter after government failed to provide them with
alternative accommodation.

      A drive around Harare by The Standard news crew showed that
"Operation Garikai/Hlalani Kuhle" - a damage-control project initiated by
government following the unplanned demolitions of houses - amounts to a
mockery for victims of the clean-up exercise.

      At some of the demolished sites, the victims have erected one
metre high structures, which, for the past year have been their homes.

      The structures, constructed from broken farm bricks - remnants
of the operation - without mortar to bind them together, have gaping holes
letting in draughts of cold air and rodents at night.

      Every morning, children and their fathers crawl out of their
shacks to go to school and work respectively. They have resigned themselves
to this situation.

      John Matemba, who has made such a structure from remnants of his
house at Joshua Mqabuko Nkomo Heights in Kambuzuma, summed up the plight of
"Murambatsvina" victims.

      Pointing to Kambuzuma high-density suburb, which is less than
100 metres from the demolished settlement, Matemba said: "It's like we're
living in hell while people across the road are in heaven. It's cold here."

      At Hopley Farm Settlement, where the government dumped 1 600
families affected by the operation, hundreds of people - some with infants -
are still sleeping in tents or on dusty floors.

      A recent draft report by an international humanitarian
organisation that provides free treatment to people in need fell just short
of condemning the settlement as inhabitable.

      The report said: "Hopley families have low resources, are living
in crowded conditions and in many cases in makeshift shelters with plastic
sheeting, thereby increasing their vulnerability to health problems such as
scabies and pneumonia."

      The snail's pace at which the houses at Hopley Farm Settlement
are being constructed irks the victims.

      Official records show that only 209 houses have been roofed
while 56 are at roof level and some of the incomplete structures have
already been occupied.

      An elderly man, who identified himself as Sekuru Solomon, said
he feared that children could die from cold during this winter.
      Weather experts predict this season will be one of the coldest
in many years.

      Sekuru Solomon told The Standard: "I have neither a bed nor a
warm blanket. I sleep on the floor with my children. I fear they (children)
will contract diseases."

      The slow construction pace at Hopley mirrors that at Hatcliffe
Extension and Whitecliff Farm, where government plans to resettle hundreds
of families affected by the operation.

      So far, only an estimated 500 houses have been completed at
Whitecliff out of the 9 000 available stands. Other houses are at various
stages of construction.

      At this rate, it could take nearly two decades before all the
intended beneficiaries secure decent shelter.

      Murambatsvina victims in Harare are part of nearly one million
families displaced by the operation countrywide, according to UN special
envoy Anna Tibaijuka.

      The Minister of Local Government, Public Works and Urban
Development, Ignatious Chombo, claims the government has built 7 000 houses
during the past year under the reconstruction programme.

      Chombo could not be reached for comment. However, the situation
on the ground does not support his claims.

      This week, civic organisations, human rights defenders and
journalists will tour settlements affected by the operation in Harare.

      Hopefully, they will be able tell the international community
that one year after, the victims of the government-sponsored operation are
still out in the cold and desperately in need of assistance.


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'Poverty, AIDS worsen child labour'

Zim Standard

      BY OUR STAFF

      BITING poverty and the HIV and AIDS scourge has led to an
increase in the cases of child labour in the country's farming areas, a
government minister has said.

      Speaking at the launch of the International Labour Organisation
(ILO) Global Report on Child Labour, the Minister of Public Service, Labour
and Social Welfare, Nicholas Goche, said poverty and the AIDS pandemic were
hampering government efforts to fight child labour.

      "It is indeed true that HIV and AIDS remain a challenge in
combating child labour since the children orphaned as a result of this
pandemic find themselves in a state of desperation and helpless thus making
themselves susceptible," Goche said, in a speech read on his behalf by the
ministry's permanent secretary, Lance Museka.

      According to the General Agricultural and Plantation Workers
Union (GAPWUZ), thousands of children, a large number of them driven out of
school because of high fees and the clean up exercise, now constitute the
bulk of farm labour in the country.

      The children, below the age of 16, are forced to work for long
hours a day on the farms and are given low wages to supplement dwindling
family incomes.

      Tayo Fashoyin, the director of the ILO sub-regional office for
southern Africa, said the cases of child labour in Africa have slightly
increased against a background of a decline in some parts of the world.

      "The results of the 1999 National Child Labour Survey carried
out in Zimbabwe show that the majority (82%) of the working children in the
country are in the Agricultural sector, where children of the workers in
this sector are engaged to supplement household incomes," Fashoyin said.

      He added that the media, however, tended to focus public
attention on street children and those who were sexually exploited which are
"numerically in the minority".

      "Many aspects of work in agriculture can extremely be hazardous
and this includes the use of poisonous chemicals, inappropriate or dangerous
equipment," he said.

      Wellington Chibebe, secretary general of the Zimbabwe Congress
of Trade Unions (ZCTU), said the eradication of child labour in the country
would be very difficult because of the current economic woes.


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Tsvangirai ups the stakes in Budiriro

Zim Standard

       BY WALTER MARWIZI

      MDC President Morgan Tsvangirai raises the stakes in Budiriro
today when he hits the campaign trail in a by-election set to determine
which of the two factions in the opposition party has greater support on the
ground.

      Although Zanu PF is also in the race, the spotlight is on the
squabbling MDC factions, both of which claim to enjoy support of the
grassroots.

      Aides to Tsvangirai told The Standard the MDC leader would this
afternoon appeal to the voters to support his faction's candidate, Emmanuel
Chisvuure.

      An aide, disclosing that 30 000 fliers had been distributed in
the constituency, said: "He wants to prove a point and will go there to
campaign for Chisvuure in Budiriro 4."

       The fliers inform voters faced with two candidates from the same
party, that Chisvuure is the candidate for the anti- Senate faction.

      But Morgan Changamire, the pro-Senate Deputy Organising
Secretary, who is co-ordinating the campaign process for Gabriel Chaibva,
said they were not intimidated by Tsvangirai's move.

      Changamire said: "Yes, he is going there, but forget about him.
We have the best candidate and rallies don't matter, only the people who go
to vote."

      Asked if pro-Senate leader Arthur Mutambara was also not joining
the campaign trail, Changamire said: "He is busy, but we are looking at the
possibility of him making a walkabout in Budiriro in the coming days."

      Both Chisvuure and Chaibva lock horns with Jeremiah Bvirindi of
Zanu PF in a by-election set for Saturday. The campaign period has largely
been peaceful, according to the Zimbabwe Election Support Network (ZESN),
which has been observing the campaign process.

      Bvirindi, the Zanu PF candidate, refused to talk to The Standard
about the progress of his campaign.

      He said: "I am campaigning right now. I don't have time to talk
to you, just give me your number, I will call you later."

      Chaibva is however asking the voters to vote for him saying he
is no newcomer to Parliament.

      Chaibva, who promised to hold government accountable for its
actions, said: "For five years I was in Parliament and fought hard and
opposed the Public Order and Security Act (POSA) and Access to Information
and Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA)."

      Chisvuure, who was at a campaign rally on Friday, said victory
was certain.

      Chisvuure said: "People know what we represent and there is no
doubt who we are. If I was in doubt, you would be seeing me approaching
newspapers looking for publicity."


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Workers suspended over dustbin cash

Zim Standard

      By our correspondent

      GWERU - Two workers at a commercial bank in Gweru have been
suspended as authorities step up investigations into circumstances
surrounding cash found in a dustbin two weeks ago.

      Workers from Gweru City Council's refuse collection department
reportedly stumbled upon R30 000 stashed in a dustbin while they were on
duty.

      The waste collectors reportedly became excited and caused a
commotion, which attracted the attention of security guards and members of
the public.

      The Standard understands that investigators established the
cash, discovered behind the Commercial Bank of Zimbabwe (CBZ), may have come
from another bank.

      CBZ Public Relations Manager, Matilda Nyathi, said the money did
not belong to their bank.

      "Our books were checked and they were balancing. We share the
same sanitary lane with another bank but I cannot say whether the money is
from that bank," Nyathi said.

      Banking sources told The Standard that two workers at the nearby
Stanbic Bank had been suspended after foreign currency went missing at the
bank.

      According to sources, the two were suspended last week as
investigations now involving the police, continue.

      Officers from the Criminal Investigation Department who are
investigating the case said they could not shed any more light on the issue
saying doing so could jeopardise their investigations.

      Pindie Nyandoro, Stanbic Managing Director, confirmed to The
Standard that some workers had been suspended to allow investigations into
the disappearance of foreign currency.

      "Actually it's R2 000 and not R30 000. I don't know where this
high figure is coming from. The money must have been stolen and it was
picked from the dustbin at the CBZ because we share the same sanitary lane,"
Nyandoro said.


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Bus accident kills nine in Harare

Zim Standard

      BY OUR STAFF

      NINE people died yesterday morning while 15 others were
njured  -  three of them seriously - when a Tanda Tavaruva bus was involved
in an accident with a commuter bus along Simon Mazorodze road in Harare.

      According to police, the driver of a commuter bus, turned right
in front of oncoming traffic  resulting in the collision.

      Acting police spokesperson, assistant inspector Honest Musara,
said the injured were rushed to Harare and Parirenyatwa hospitals.

      Musara said: "The bus, which had no passengers, was heading
north along Simon Mazorodze and was reported to have been on its way to pick
up passengers at Mbare Musika.

      "The kombi driver turned right in front of oncoming traffic
resulting in the accident and eight people died on the spot."

      Musara said the front of the bus was extensively damaged while
the whole right side of the commuter bus was also damaged.

      "We have not yet received the finer details on the condition of
the drivers but all the people who died were on the commuter omnibus."

      Names of the victims were still being withheld, as their next of
kin are yet to be informed.


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Gono flips, now wait for the flop

Zim Standard

       marketwatch by Deborah-Fay Ndlovu

      THE Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe last week phased out the 91-day
Treasury Bills to replace them with long-term papers in a development meant
to mop up excess liquidity and reduce money supply growth.

      Central Bank Governor, Dr Gideon Gono, released a circular
announcing that monetary authorities had stopped issuing 91-day TBs but had
instead introduced one-year, two-year and three-year TBs each with a yield
linked to the Consumer Price Index and additional margins of 2 %, 7,5 % and
10 % respectively.

       "The highlight of the week was the phasing out of the 91-day TBs
last Monday. The Governor (Gono) wrote a memo stating that there would be
new instruments on the market in the form of the one-year, two-year and
three-year Special OMO (Open Market Operation). The one-year OMO is linked
to CPI and has a margin of 2%," said Terrence Mazango of Highveld.

      Market watchers said the move was meant to mop up excess
liquidity coming through to the market because of TB maturities and money
from the tobacco auction floors and also to restructure Government debt.

      However, the development prompted a drop in short - term
interest rates after the notice unnerved financial institutions, who fearing
that the development would trigger liquidity constraints, decided to reduce
call rates to between 100 and 200% last week
      "Giving people a seven-day instrument when the asset is one year
could affect liquidity. There has to be a match between assets and liability
that is why most banks were offering reduced short-term rates," said an
analyst who declined to be named.

      Fears were also abound that investors would as in the past shun
long term TBs but Mazango said he expects their popularity to increase when
liquidity improves next week.

       The analyst also said using a rate pegged to the CPI should also
contribute to the popularity of the OMOs.

      Meanwhile, the stock market recovered as a result of the decline
in short- term interest rates.

      The industrial index closed Wednesday 25,69% points stronger at
45 556 117.66 points.

      "It's the low interest rates and the fact that the market has
not moved much since January that has contributed to the gains. Stocks had
become under valued and the movement is just to match with inflation,"
explained an analyst with a local broking firm.
      There were no losses recorded last Wednesday with counters such
as Old Mutual leading the gains after adding $100 000 to
       $7 00 000.

      Econet added $25 000 to $325 000 because of its growth potential
while Delta, Natfoods and TA soared a significant
      $10 000 apiece to close at $60 000, $70 000 and $30 000
respectively.

      Analysts said the blue chip counters gained because investor
interest was directed to heavily capitalised counters whose performance was
based on the strength of their financial results and the potential to grow.

      "People would prefer the blue chips first because they know if
there are policy changes the stock performance would be based on
fundamentals such as financial results and growth potential."

      The mining index shrugged off news of a take over of foreign
companies by locals to gain 33,14% points to Wednesday at 11 666 413.89
points.


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Hospitality association mourns as tourism continues downward slide

Zim Standard

      BY GODFREY MUTIMBA

      THE Hospitality Association of Zimbabwe (HAZ) has expressed
concern over the continued decline of the tourism industry, aggravated by
the incessant economic meltdown over the years.

      Speaking during a conference to announce the HAZ Indaba slated
for Masvingo this week, HAZ co-vice president, Fungai Mutseyekwa, said the
challenging economic situation facing the country had a detrimental effect
on the hospitality industry.

      Mutseyekwa said this year's three-day congress that begins on
Wednesday, would discuss ideas to revive the declining industry.

      He said: "Our association has a crucial role to play and we owe
it to our country and ourselves to consider practical solutions and
initiatives that will help us find ourselves again. Hospitality and Tourism
are the Siamese twins of the country's economy-when one coughs; the other
catches a cold. The decline in tourism anywhere in the world is bad news for
hospitality service; that's why people talk of hospitality and tourism in
the same breath."

       This year's congress is held under the theme Great Ideas for
Hospitality Revival.  HAZ said that the theme is derived from the economic
woes that have impacted negatively on the hospitality industry.

      Mutseyekwa said: "This theme is informed by the challenging
economic challenges economic situation facing our country, which has a
deleterious effect across the board, including our industry. Rather than
continue in a state of what someone called 'analysis paralysis', we felt
that Congress this year should be used as an opportunity to discuss
solutions."


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Damn statistics!

Zim Standard

      BY OUR STAFF

      ZIMBABWE deserves a place among economically successful First
World countries, if unemployment figures released by the Central Statistical
Office (CSO) last week are anything to go by.

       At 9% Zimbabwe joined the elite league of prosperous nations
such as UK (4.7%), Sweden (6.3%), Netherlands (4.6%) and Ireland (4.5%) with
single digit figures.

      In its latest Labour Force Survey for 2004, CSO shocked the
business community with figures that are far below estimates put forward by
independent economists who predict that the figure is anywhere above the 60%
mark.

      CSO said: "Population age 15 years and above, considered to be
the working age population, accounted for 60 percent of the population. Out
of the population age 15 years and above, 87 percent was economically
active. Using the broad definition of unemployment, nine percent was
unemployed."

      CSO went a step further estimating a total population of 10.8
million compared to the 11.6 million from the 2002 Population Census. CSO
said the 2004 LFS survey excluded visitors and students in boarding schools,
which were included in the 2002 Census. The number of persons aged 15 years
and above excluded from the labour force (inactive population) was estimated
at 829 000 of whom the largest percentage (40%) were students.

      CSO said that 193 000 persons were at least once retrenched in
the period 1995 to May 2004.

      "The highest prevalence of retrenchment was among those with
lower levels of education," CSO said.

      When the bulk of companies are operating at just 50% of
capacity, it means more retrenchments and jobs losses. The informal sector,
which used to take a sizeable number of the population, is a pale shadow of
the 90's.

      But the CSO statistics are a stark contrast to the Confederation
of Zimbabwe Industries (CZI) report released early this year. The report,
State of the Manufacturing Sector, said that the manufacturing sector had
lost 42% of the labour force in formal employment in the period 2004-2005.
The survey said that only 13%of the companies that responded to the survey
were operating at 75% of capacity.

      The CZI report said that retrenchments and reduced working hours
in the manufacturing sector were caused by low capacity utilisation.

       The CSO survey is carried out after every five years with the
last one having been conducted in 1999.

      Information from the survey is used to formulate policies on
employment, human resources development strategies, macroeconomic
monitoring, incomes support and social programmes.

      With new inflation figures coming up any time from now, strident
calls to make CSO's calculations representative of the situation on the
ground are justified.


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ZNCC Congress slated for June

Zim Standard

      By Our Staff

      THE Zimbabwe National Chamber of Commerce will next month hold
its annual congress at the resort town of Victoria Falls, chamber president,
Luxon Zembe, said last week.

      The congress to be held under the theme "In pursuit of a shared
economic vision, confidence building, transparency and policy consistence"
will run from 28 to 31 June.

      Zembe said key issues to be discussed include the need for a
market-driven economy, creating an environment conducive for investment and
economic empowerment and vowed that business will keep "pushing" on until
Government responds positively.

      "Some of the key issues to be discussed include the need for a
market driven economy. That will entail the removal of price controls and we
will continue pushing until the walls are broken down. We will never give up
because that will be giving up on our future and ourselves. We will not keep
quiet irrespective of the resistance," Zembe said.

      Zimbabwean businesses are faced with an acute shortage of
foreign currency and have had to downsize operations to survive.
      But ZNCC believes the economy can improve with the "right
atmosphere".

      Zembe said they would also be inviting regional investors to
talk about the creation of the "right atmosphere" and what they expect out
of Zimbabwe for them to plough in their money.

      He said discussions on economic empowerment will centre on the
proposed controversial amendments for the Mines and Minerals Act, which the
industrialist said should be carried out amicably.

      "No one has qualms with the policy but we are worried that the
approach will further destabilise the situation. The methodology used should
make us stronger instead of weakening our position," he said.

      Government has proposed that the State acquires a
non-contributory 25 % equity from foreign owned mines on the promulgation of
the bill into law and the nationalised stake would be increased to 51 %
within five years.


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Common currency for southern Africa: more hurdles emerge

Zim Standard

      By Our Staff

      SOUTHERN Africa prepares for a common monetary area by 2018 but
talks have stirred more debate than progress.

      A requirement for single digit inflation by 2008, doubts over
which currency to use and political will to allow central banks to operate
autonomously could prove costly to the talks.

       While the Central Banks of Southern African Development
Community have said use of common currency is a must and pencilled its debut
for 2018 they are worried about the hurdles they face.

      An official adding that a Memorandum of Understanding has
already been signed by regional central banks, said: "The Model Act presses
against the involvement of civil servants from the central banks. Talks are
still at rudimentary stages and are running slow because of doubts over
which currency to take. The other question is: are politicians ready to let
go of central banks because talks have raised debate on issues of
sovereignty."

      He could as well have been talking about Zimbabwe. Local
analysts contributed to the debate last week and said the requirement that
the civil service disassociates itself from involvement in central banks to
enable the project to take off could be a tall order given government's
reliance on the Reserve Bank to settle its bills.

      One economist, who declined to be named, said: "We have got a
central bank that is printing money against its will, what other evidence do
we need of government interference?"

      Government denies interference but analysts believe that could
stand in the way of Zimbabwe meeting the 2008 deadline for single digit
inflation.

      David Chapfika, the Deputy Minister of Finance, said the Reserve
Bank of Zimbabwe operates autonomously "but obviously they have to consult
with the Ministry of Finance".

      South Africa's suggestion for the use of the Rand has not helped
ease the debate either.

      Zimbabwe National Chamber of Commerce president, Luxon Zembe,
said: "That is being bullish and South Africa is behaving like a big
brother."

       His sentiments could just as well reflect popular opinion on a
debate marred by memories of an abandoned currency - the Common Market for
Eastern and Southern Africa phased out UAPTA in 1997 to replace it with the
United States dollar.

      ZABG economist Andy Hodges, believes the memory could hang over
SADC's efforts to use a common currency and raised concern that stronger
economies will benefit at the expense of weak ones.

      "The strong economies will benefit and those without export
infrastructure will be at disadvantage. Target has been set in the future so
countries will be ready and if that does not happen then they can join
later," Hodges said.

      While the debate rages on analysts acknowledge that using a
common currency would be beneficial especially to Zimbabwean businesses.

      Zembe said: "It will facilitate trade. There would be no need to
look for foreign currency and issues of exchange rate risk or exposure will
be eliminated for Zimbabwe because everyone will be trading in the same
currency."

       Zimbabwe's volatile exchange rate has been a source of headache
to industry, which has had to contend with a ban on their imports in
countries like Zambia.

      Zambia banned imports from Zimbabwe last year citing a multiple
exchange rate system that has seen the country operate both an official and
parallel market for foreign currency.

      Local businesses have also had to contend with a
hyper-inflationary environment that has made it difficult to operate at
optimum production levels and resulted in company closures.

      However, use of common currency should eliminate these problems
through the establishment of an integrated economy throughout Southern
Africa.

      "National central banks will begin to operate along the same
philosophies, having the same inflation figures and growth targets and that
is what economic integration is all about ­- the whole of SADC running like
a single country," said the industrialist.

      Kingdom economist, Witness Chinyama said the move should reduce
production and transport costs for local companies.


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It's never too late to begin undoing the damage

Zim Standard

Comment

      THE government concedes Zimbabwe has pursued a costly and
disastrous course over the past six years.
      It is out of this realisation that it has decided to reverse
occupation of seized productive properties such as Kondozi Farm in
Manicaland to their original owners so that they can continue to generate
much-needed foreign currency for the country.

      Kondozi raises intriguing issues: Vice President Joseph Msika
deplored the seizure of the enterprise. So did his colleague, Vice President
Joice Mujuru. The architects of the plunder of Kondozi are known. Will the
government have the will to deal with and make an example out of its own
rogue elements? Or will it condone their brazen acts of illegality at far
greater cost to the nation, its popularity and legacy?

      But for the government to demonstrate that it is serious about
bridge building, about pulling Zimbabwe from the morass and itself from the
dangerous experiment of the past six years it will need to demonstrate its
zero tolerance of the mayhem that continues to manifest itself countrywide
contrary to government's declarations that the land reform programme was
concluded long ago.

      Recent cases have identified on-going violent evictions in
Rusape, Nyazura, Chipinge, Karoi and Beatrice in particular, where an
enterprise that should enjoy international investment protection has been
commandeered, with law-enforcement officers seemingly impotent.

      Kondozi not only raises questions of whether anyone is in charge
of this country and if so what exactly they believe they are driving it
towards; the fate of the estate also demonstrates the crass incompetence of
the Agricultural and Rural Development Authority, ARDA.

      Ownership of Kondozi cannot be restored without deciding the
fate of those who cost the country so much in international exports, foreign
exchange and general perception of its contempt for the rule of law.

      Restoration of Kondozi and similar projects is not difficult.
Consider for a moment the impact of President Robert Mugabe instructing the
commissioner of police to arrest, in a matter of weeks, anyone who disrupted
farming activities throughout the country by forcibly evicting the previous
owners and occupying farms.

      If there is resolve to restore order to the agricultural sector,
the government could put commercial farmers back on the land with a new
mandate that is certain to revolutionise agriculture: each commercial farmer
to work with and mentor half a dozen new farmers surrounding him/her and
have this repeated throughout the country.

      For example, if there are still an estimated 900 commercial
farmers around, the number of highly productive farmers could rise to 5 400
and farm productivity would witness a giant leap forward if the new farmers
are initially limited to graduates of agricultural colleges. With the kind
of government support the sector has enjoyed during recent years, the sector
could experience a real revolution and become a model for other countries


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Zimbabwe's hospitals of death

Zim Standard

       sundayopinion by Marko Phiri

      AN old woman walked into a hospital last week for a routine
diabetes check up. By her own wishes, she would do this then return to her
rural home where she had lived peacefully all her life. She did not make it
back this time around.

       She died two days later. It was her sons who discovered her dead
when they came  during the visiting hour. And the nurses? - well, they
simply said they were not aware of her state! Welcome to Zimbabwe's hospital
hell.

      In a country like the United States, attorneys would feast on
the hospital with the family claiming millions of dollars for negligence.
They would not demand a fee for the case,  but would simply claim a third of
the punitive damages likely to be awarded by the courts. All this because
they know the institution will have  a case to answer.

      The government has assumed the arrogance of those priests from
an Asian religion who sit on pedestals and snort at the low caste
untouchables; families here just take the devastation without any recompense
from the bungling institutions. But then, what can replace life?

      It is important to interrogate the manner in which people have
resigned themselves to the manifold abuses by this government but still can
do nothing about it, with elections having proved useless as a means of
registering their discontent.

      Somebody has written about policy paralysis with the government
having no clue about virtually anything to heave the country out of this
miasma. It is that paralysis which graphically manifests itself in how
service delivery has gone down to levels that would not be acceptable
anywhere in the world. Well, maybe other African democracies!

      While Zimbabwe had one of the most envied health delivery
systems this side of the Sahara, it appears over the past decade or so,
decided to stick to the African way where hospitals are known to have not a
single pill in the dispensary; where hospitals have become places where one
goes to die, not to look for life.

      Perhaps most bizarrely; one of those hospitals is actually
called Mpilo, meaning life. But what they dispense with alarming frequency
has no modicum of the life thus claimed.

      The thinking appears to be, if Zambia or Malawi our good SADC
neighbours can have abject conditions at their hospitals, why not run down
ours in solidarity with our African brothers?

       This appears true within the context of that obsession with
pan-Africanism, and because one of Africa's last strongmen was recently
honoured with a whole thoroughfare named after him, it thus seems to make no
sense to have a functioning economy when your neighbours are living amidst
untold poverty.

      The country's gangrene is seen in areas that ought to provide
hope for the people here, and hospitals, among other essential services,
become the index through which a country's development or lack thereof is
adjudged. Surely if hospitals are turned into virtual involuntary euthanasia
centres should not the government move in to investigate? Or it would be the
case of a government investigating itself therefore the verdict being pretty
obvious?

      With the manifold failures of this regime, it still remains
baffling that they insist on steering this ship when it is obvious other men
and women of goodwill ought to take charge. But perhaps it is  naive to
expect an African politician in the fashion of Richard Nixon to look the
nation in the eye and say "the people of Zimbabwe, I am sorry I failed" and
duly resign.

      The interesting dimension of the state Zimbabwe finds itself in
is that will the country see any major policy shift if Mugabe were to step
down tomorrow and still make way for a dyed-in-the-wool Zanu PF "cadre".

      Or the country's fortunes lie in a totally new political
dispensation? Suppose Zanu PF capitulated and decided to re-author the
country's constitution and call for a referendum, would that  also signal a
turn of the country's fortunes still with this party in power? But as the
good professor Jonathan Moyo said in his erstwhile days as government's
chief of spin doctor, no government can legislate itself out of power! That
leaves little or no options for a power shift considering elections have
failed abysmally to be that vehicle of political transition.

      A country like Japan, an economic behemoth today, has a
fascinating political history where governments came and went with such
alarming frequency that one wondered if there was ever anybody competent
enough to rule that country for two full years.

      The factors ranged from allegations of corruption to failure by
political parties to claim a majority in government as coalitions simply
crumbled as differences became violent with punches thrown in parliament.

      Zimbabwe however has endured two very long decades of a party
that has run down the country despite the now institutionalised corruption
with government officials bearing the torch.

      "If something makes you cry, you have to do something about it.
That is the difference between politics and guilt." (Bill Clinton, 1994).


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Education no longer a right in Zimbabwe

Zim Standard

       sunday opinion by Webster Zambara

      As schools opened for the second term there was no joy at all.
Instead, there was anger and trauma in pupils and students, parents and
guardians as well as school authorities. This is against a tapestry of
massive fee hikes coupled with sharp rises in prices of school uniforms and
all the necessities required in an educational set up.

      There are three things that preceded the beginning of the second
school term that advance my thesis in this article. In Bulawayo, 70 children
and 112 women were held by the police for demonstrating against school fee
increases.

      In Harare 48 college students were detained, allegedly for not
respecting the portrait of President Robert Mugabe. It was also reported in
this paper a child led coalition of children's organizations, Child and
Youth Budget Network, would like to organize massive demonstrations by
children in order to force the government to reverse fee increases. I will
try to analyse these demonstrations separately although the fact that they
derive from the same thinking and feeling, hoping for the same output, is
obvious.

       The underlying issue is that these Zimbabweans will not
genuflect as their dignity and rights to education are systematically
stripped from them. And to me as a conflict worker these are just symptoms
of much deeper underlying conflicts that have not been resolved. And without
beating about the bush, it is our economy, stupid!

      For Minister Aeneas Chigwedere to come out in the open trying to
put the blame on school authorities is like trying to hide behind his
finger. When we had a normal economy we never experienced such massive
increases in both government and private institutions. When we got our
independence we promised each other that everyone had a right to education
and primary education would be for free.

      Whether making it free was the best option is not the issue, but
I personally benefited from it because I was a deserving citizen. I recall
very well at Chiguhune Primary School in Gutu district in 1980 that on the
first day at school I would receive all the required textbooks and exercise
books, including the wrappers, better known as khaki covers. When my ball
point pen was finished, I would simply go with the emptied 're-fills' for
replacement. At break-time we would have mahewu. Pupils  in urban areas tell
of receiving pints of milk and candy cakes at break time.

      Our duty when we went to school was to learn. No one would
starve.

      I also recall vividly that at one time my two sisters and I were
attending boarding schools when our dear father, Nicholas Zambara, was only
a primary school teacher back in Gutu but he could still afford to pay for
us.

      Now as schools opened last week most civil servants had earned
around $10million. I am therefore not surprised when Women of Zimbabwe Arise
and their children took to the streets to protest because they themselves
(mothers) were exercising their right to education. They get frustrated if
that right is denied their children. And the children have the right to
sympathise with their mothers because it is for their cause as well.

      I watched with a heavy heart when Chigwedere was on local news
on our one and only broadcasting station. He had the audacity to tell the
nation that there is no law that says a child may be sent back home because
he or she does not have uniform. This coming from a qualified teacher like
him? I am a retired teacher myself and I know the classroom environment from
a professional point. Such a child would be traumatised and that will affect
performance. And how would the parents and guardians feel? By the way, who
wanted to introduce one uniform for all schools not long ago?

      As I am writing this article, there is jambanja at Bindura
University, and thirty-nine students have been arrested. While government
has hiked tertiary fees, payouts have not been increased. Naturally students
feel short -changed, and their academic endeavours have been jeopardised.
Education is no longer a right, but a privilege for a few who can afford.

      When I personally went through the system, we would receive our
education on a government loan that we would pay back after completion of
our studies. Now the economy is in such tatters that the government knows
all these graduates will not be employed, thus recovery of the loans will be
difficult, and students are the pawns! So it's the economy, simple.

      But even when the economy was good, the government was so lazy
to collect the loans. Or rather incompetent, or both. Look at this:
government gave me a loan and later employed me as a teacher. It had to hire
a private firm called Magfair to collect its loans from me, its employee!
Anyone who attained tertiary education in the past two decades can bear
witness.

      And when young children threaten to demonstrate against fee
hikes and general economic hardships, then our dead did not see anything.
Chave Chimurenga!


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The hidden costs of donor dependency

Zim Standard

       sunday view by Tajudeen Abdul-Raheem

      If you read anything about Mozambique today and the "tremendous
progress" the country is supposed to be making, one cannot help recollecting
similar rave reviews and reports about Uganda in the late 1980s through the
1990s.

      The statistics are very familiar: more than 6% growth rate,
expanding opportunities for business, IMF/World Bank ideology, a confident
middle class, and an environment open to foreign investment, international
non-governmental organisations and donor organisations etc.

      In plain words, a nation open to business. In the case of Uganda
there was also identification with "a strong man", considered an
"enlightened" or "benevolent" dictator. Of course the ovation for Uganda is
no longer as enthusiastic as it used to be not only due to the economic
limitations of macro-economic rejuvenation in a dependent economy but also
the limits of political tolerance between the ruling party/clique and
President on the one hand and their erstwhile over indulgent foreign
supporters.

      In some senses President Yoweri Museveni has become the tail
trying to wag the dog.  A beggar who cannot accept the ultimate loss of
sovereignty stemming from an economy that is too much dependent on outside
forces and support.

      So it was with Uganda in mind that I arrived in Maputo last
week. There are no doubts about the visible signs of a country in some kind
of rebirth after a painful history of armed conflicts, largely the result of
regional destabilisation of neighbouring apartheid
      South Africa and the immoral logic of the cold war.

      Many new buildings are going up and old ones being
rehabilitated. The hotels are in brisk business full of ubiquitous United
Nations, Western NGO officials and assorted business men and women all over
the place.

      There are more than 20 major donor agencies and organizations in
the country that are basically the engine of the new growth. It is a reward
for successful peaceful settlement of the war against RENAMO, ideological
capitulation or pragmatic realignment away from the former Stalinist model
and endorsement for the political leadership.

      But as in Uganda this support come with costs that increase
everyday. One, it is not sustainable that a country be so dependent on
foreigners through both direct budget support and resources for its capital
development. Two, such endorsement come with
       political consequences that often lead to collisions in the
future especially after a period of stabilisation. Those   who pay the piper
will want to call the tune eventually. Also the growth may not guarantee any
long lasting development.

      Speaking to some of the officials of the key government
ministries the story is similar to what many people in the Ministry of
Finance and Economic Planning in many African countries will recognise. Just
take the example of the time that the government of Mozambique spends on a
twice yearly review with donors. Each round takes 45 days each which means
90 days in the year.

      If you had one month of official holidays in the country
(January) and the one month of annual leave in the Western countries
(generally August) this means that the working year is actually seven months
including all the national holidays, usual weekends! What time is spent by
government officials on actually working to deliver services to their own
people?

      Those who are condemned to these endless missions, evaluations,
know that as a consequence of these meetings more meetings and missions are
generated. In a way development becomes paper-driven. No wonder the
"miraculous" average growth rates bandied about often mean nothing to the
vast population condemned to eke out their living in the "micro" level.

      Many African governments as a result of their collective
political failure and mismanagement of the resources of the continent have
made themselves supervisors for foreign interests and are now conditioned to
be accountable to donors and Western agencies. They are often too scared or
intimidated to resist unless when their narrow political interests (like
continuing stay in power) are concerned.

      Yet donor demands and interventions are collectively undermining
the capacity of our governments and peoples.

      Many of the so-called opposition politicians spend more time
complaining, whining and pining to foreign (and usually Western ) diplomats
and other aid officials than organising to politically challenge misruling
governments.

      Our governments sign up to international commitments like the
Millennium Development Goals in addition to mountains of other Intra-African
protocols  or agreements like NEPAD, the African Peer Review Mechanism,
without expecting to fulfil them.

      Not a few Africans are fed up with this situation but too many
of us agonise instead of organising. But Reverend Nyongonkulu Ndungane, the
Archbishop of Cape Town, following in the tradition of activist priests like
his predecessor, Bishop Desmond Tutu, is hoping to reverse the trend of
governance without accountability both on the continent and internationally.
And he is challenging other Africans to join him.

      On Wednesday 3 May, after almost a year of consultations across
the continent among civil society, NGOs, governments, international agencies
and multilateral institutions, he launched the African Monitor. The mission
is to make sure that African governments and non-African governments too
meet the commitments they have made under various instruments chiefly, the
MDGs, NEPAD, G8, etc.

      It is a very daunting task.  However because the Archbishop has
a wide constituency of Faith based groups (not limited to Christians or
Anglicans but involving other faiths) and also due to the existence of so
many groups working (often in isolation) across the continent, the African
Monitor, may actually provide a useful service in building bridges of
activism and policy engagement and ensure accountability through high level
advocacy backed by grassroots activism.

      As I have argued elsewhere Africa does not need new commitments
or promises just a fulfilment of old ones we made to ourselves and made by
others.

      While our governments are used to being formally accountable to
outsiders the African Monitor hopes to make them accountable to their own
peoples and also monitor the accountability of others to us. In a way it may
operationalise one of the few good things in the APRM - the principle of
mutual accountability between us and those who claim to be our international
partners.

      As the South African Vice President Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka,
observed in her conclusion at the Workshop that preceded the launch even the
Monitors need to be watched. The ultimate monitor is the active citizenship
in Africa and outside of Africa that governments they elect be politically
accountable to them and honour commitments they signed.


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Zim Standard Letters



Army can be a force for good
       OUR elected MPs and those of their colleagues in government have
failed us, throughout the history of this country. None of them ever worked
for the good of the nation.

      Whatever they have done was simply to endorse the thoughts of
President Robert Mugabe. We are in our current mess because of the
ineptitude of our government ministers who have never been able to challenge
Mugabe.

      I am not for challenging the President for the sake of
challenging but constructive challenging would have averted where we are
today as a country.

      Mugabe has unwittingly put himself on the spot. The President
has always believed that the army is in his pocket but alas, this has been a
pipe dream and could be his undoing. The army has been put in every
government department and what the generals have seen has opened their eyes
to the current sorry state of the nation.

      Zimbabwe is on the verge of collapse. That is why the army is
flexing its muscles. First the army warns Mugabe of possible food riots.
The cowardly Minister of Agriculture, Joseph Made, could not summon enough
courage to give such a simple warning.

      Now the army is doing the unbelievable - negotiating with
commercial farmers and bringing them back onto the farms.

      George Charamba, the Secretary for Information and Publicity,
refuses to call this capitulation of his government. This should not
surprise anybody because even the Deputy Minister of Information, Bright
Matonga is a man in denial. He is like a sick man who denies that he is sick
when he cannot even stand up on his own.

      The army should not be deterred by the likes of Charamba. Unlike
the spineless and voiceless government ministers, the army has been telling
the President a number of home truths. Mugabe must have been told that the
army could only shoot so many Zimbabweans but not all Zimbabweans when push
comes to shove.

      The Minister of Defence, whoever he is, could not say that to
the dreaded President. The army is not accepting any "No" from the
President, where the well being of the country is concerned.

      The army was really at fault when they allowed Zanu PF to take
the whole country for such an ignominious ride. Warnings of disaster have
been in abundance for years, yet the army failed to help the people of
Zimbabwe - which is their real duty to do so during times of peril.

      The soldiers even took part in plundering and raping the
country. However, now we hear a whisper of sanity coming from the barracks.
The army is helping in repossessing everything that has been plundered by
our greedy government ministers. The army should not accept any resistance
from these spineless robbers - it is the duty of the army to rectify our
current disaster.

      How far can the country survive with people whose lifespan has
dropped to between 32 and 35 years of age? I appeal to the army to go on
doing the good they have initiated not because I support army coups. I do
not, but the army can possibly help organise fair and transparent elections.

      Let the army push for a new constitution acceptable to all
Zimbabweans, followed by general elections. The army must not allow Zimbabwe
to collapse because of a handful of directionless politicians. Rogue
elements in the army can easily be dealt with by sending them to prison
farms where they can sweat it out.

      This is why I am in full support of the army and believe it can
be a force for good. I have not gone soft in the head by pronouncing my
support for the new role of the army.

       Reformist
      Masvingo

------------
Hell hath no fury like a cop spurned
      I write in the hope that the Commissioner of Police sees this
letter and understands what his officers out here at Mutorashanga are doing.

      One of the officers at the station proposed love to a woman,
Chipo Muponda, during a meeting at Mutorashanga club.  The lady turned him
down but was warned that one day he would fix her.

      On 21 April 2006 around 3PM the officer in question met the same
lady, who was going to the shopping centre in the company of three other
ladies. One of these ladies - Jannet Muponda - happens to be the elder
sister of Chipo, the lady the officer had proposed to. They live in Tafara 2
in Mutorashanga. The second of the three ladies, Taurai Manyukise, also
lives in Tafara 2, while the third - Egness Marko - lives at Muriel Mine.

      The officer, who was driving, stopped and offered the ladies a
lift. They got in and were driven straight to the Charge Office, which is
very near. They were detained. They were informed that they were being
charged with loitering for the purpose of prostitution.

      This happened during daylight, and the law says otherwise.

      The four were officially detained at 5PM in a cell that also
held male accused persons. They stayed like that for some time. They were
only separated much later. The accused male persons were taken to the Charge
Office in order to make way for the ladies as there is only one cell at the
police station.

      The ladies were detained for three days even though some of them
could afford to pay fines. They were released on 23 April at 8AM after
paying fines.

      These ladies learnt the lessons that an officer's attention
could not be spurned. Their receipts show that they were arrested at 7PM in
the evening, which is a lie.

      Residents in this area are not happy with the type of treatment
the four ladies received. I just wanted Police Commissioner Augustine
Chihuri to understanding what his officers are getting up to in some of
these far flung places.

      Worried
       Mutorashanga

---------
Makwavarara should be booted out without a cent
      WHEN "Asset stripper" Sekesai Makwavarara leaves the Commission
running the affairs of the City of Harare, I hope the government will not
reward her with anything in the same way it did to Joseph Macheka, the
former mayor of Chitungwiza or any other former mayors.

      My point is very simple; name any five  things she  did to
benefit the residents of Harare. Quite frankly I have tried very hard but
failed to come up with half an explanation.

      All I  find is that she has, from the word go, sought to feather
her own nest. I was glad to see that some of the Commissioners decided to
reconsider the offer to let her buy the council house in Highlands for a
song.

       It was grossly immoral for who ever thought up the idea that
she be given the house in the first place. I used the word given because
that is what it is. How can one in their right mind think of selling a
property that is worth more than $20 billion for less than $1 billion? It
just shows that there are a lot of bootlickers crawling everywhere.

      We have allowed a lot of these functionaries to abuse us at will
and civil society organisations must demand that the people or committee
that sat down to think of such a silly offer to Makwavarara be hauled before
a "Truth Commission" to explain themselves.

       Makwavarara deserves nothing - absolutely nothing. She has done
nothing for the party to which she defected. In fact, she has cost them
considerable support and this could be confirmed in this month's
parliamentary by election in Budiriro. She has also failed completely to
justify why the government ever thought she could rise to the job. I think,
whoever, though she was suitable for the job must be asked to explain to
residents of Harare what criteria was used to assess her capabilities.

      Voters in Budiriro will, on Saturday, be asked not merely to
vote in a new MP. They will also be asked to pass a decision on the status
of service delivery in Harare. I hope the contesting parties do not miss
this point.

      It is time to reclaim their right. Too much of watching from the
sidelines has in part been responsible for the neglect and plunder of the
city's resources by people appointed to add value to it and improve on
service delivery.

      Tirivanhu Mhofu
      Emerald Hill
       Harare

----------
Moyo disclosures expose the cowards surrounding Mugabe
      RECENT disclosures of the inner workings of both the ruling
party and the government by former information minister, Professor Jonathan
Moyo, have made riveting reading. Now we understand what kind of cowards
they are.

      But not only are they cowards, among them are informers and
unrepentant opportunists. This is one thing that those in the larger circle
around President Robert Mugabe do not understand. However, it is this
knowledge that comforts Mugabe and enables him to do as he wishes.

      The reason why the Tsholotsho gang was flushed out is because of
opportunists around Mugabe, who hoped to curry favour by ratting on their
colleagues. These are the sort of people who do not tolerate free debate on
the future of the country, even that of Zanu PF.

      Moyo's disclosures will, in my view, show Mugabe that none of
the bootlickers around him can be trusted. Sadly for the majority of
Zimbabweans it means Mugabe will put off his retirement plans. As Vice
President Joseph Msika says, how can they hand over to such
"pseudo-revolutionaries"?

      Events elsewhere on the continent have only saved to reinforce
this mistrust. Mugabe can never trust his lieutenants not to do a Charles
Taylor on him. So the rule is: If in doubt, don't do anything.

      Yet if those around him were real men and not bootlickers, they
would have advised Mugabe that it would be in the interests of the nation
and his young family to begin to work on a succession plan that will ensure
a smooth transition and guarantee stability for the country.

      Others, such as those who scuttled plans to encourage democracy
within the ruling party did so because change represents a threat to their
interests. For them things could never better. As long as the situation
remains the way it is their interests are safeguarded.

      It is in our interests to identify who these people are and warn
them about the possibilities of facing music at some point in the future for
their role in derailing an economy that held so much prospects for growth
and expansion.

      Jonathan Moyo did well by "firing" himself from the government
and his recent instalments are some kind of a truth and reconciliation
"confession". He is proving how useful he is to the country, even though
people will always view him with suspicion.

      So Patrick Chinamasa and Emmerson Mnangagwa will work on the
necessary amendments to ensure that Mugabe extends his term to 2010, but
once they have done that they will want to recall what happened to the late
Eddison Zvobgo, when he worked so tirelessly to create the institution of an
executive presidency.

      M Moyo
      Fitchlea
       Kwekwe

----------
MIC, an irrelevant media anachronism
      I found your report on the demand by the Media and Information
Commission for a list of journalists covering the Harare International
Festival of the Arts very intriguing.

       However, I believe you missed the point. The mission of the MIC
had nothing to do with accreditation. It had everything to do with extorting
money from the foreign press corps here to provide coverage of HIFA. The
government and the MIC are fond of lamenting the negative publicity the
country receives from both local and foreign media. HIFA was a wonderfully
positive story and what the MIC's handling of the whole thing demonstrated
was its ineptitude at managing situations to its advantage. This was not the
point behind the hue and cry concerning accreditation of the media.

      I suspect the lure of foreign currency was too tempting for the
MIC. It will be recalled that there was a case involving the improper
handling of foreign currency by one of the MIC workers.

      As for the policing aspects, the MIC was well represented.
Anyone who believes a media house with a vastly smaller number of
journalists than The Herald and Sunday Mail can send 31 people to cover the
festival needs to have their heads examined. What coverage was this army of
journalists providing to their organisation? It seems to me many of the
so-called journalists were something else. I leave readers to draw their own
conclusions. like the guys with their shades.

       I also believe that the MIC has very little interest in the
welfare of journalists. In fact, it seems as if it would be happy with no
media operating in this country at all - the same thing they have caused at
The Daily News, The Daily News on Sunday, the Tribune and the Weekly Times.

      It is for this reason that they will not bat an eyelid before
shutting down a newspaper and throwing hundreds of workers onto the streets.

      What single act has the MIC undertaken since its establishment
and aimed at promoting the interests of journalists or those at training
schools?

      It is a pity that the Ministry of Information does not appear to
have the necessary desire to resolve this anachronistic structure.

      Because Ian Smith had the Censorship Board - the moral and
thought control body of his time - therefore we must have something of our
own?

      No more of this bungling! Let's for once think about something
positive and actually get it implemented.

      For years this country functioned without an MIC. What are the
compelling reasons for its existence now?

      No More
      Newlands
       Harare

-----------
Behind those statistics

WORKERS at the Central Statistical Office are among the worst paid in the
country. Our concern is not just about poor salaries, but for the past two
years we have never been paid on time.

The earliest time we have been paid is the 6th of the following month. We
have extended families and right now we have children at school whose fees
were due before Tuesday. We cannot pay because of late payments by our
employer.

We do not understand whether someone is not doing their work or whether this
is just an attempt to fix other people. We are treated like beggars when we
have contracts with our employer.

We are the people who collect data on inflation each and every month and so
we know and understand how workers are affected, yet we have not been
getting our money on time. Each time we ask why there are delays we get
stupid explanations.

CSO workers
Countrywide

----------

ZTV's senseless programming

THE local television programming has no quality to talk about at all. This
is because the people behind the scheduling obviously watch international
channels. How else do you justify popular programmes being screened before
six in the morning when everybody is preparing to go either to work or
school?

Talking farming on a Sunday? - I would rather retire early. Visiting farmers
on their newly allocated farms to show the nation success stories of the
land reform exercise would be a good idea than just someone appearing on
television in the studio.

It is very important that ZBH do some surveys to determine the popularity of
their programmes. I would also think the soap studio 263 has totally lost
direction now.

Lance Saungweme
Makomo Section
Epworth

---------
Harare commission shows indifference to workers plight
      THE Commission running the affairs of Harare is riding roughshod
over employees of the city because of its lackadaisical approach to
negotiations over salary adjustments.

      Despite the recent ministerial orders that council employees be
remunerated salaries that relate to inflation, the commission chooses to
look the other way and is busy squandering council resources for their own
benefit.

      It seems to me that for the Commission the word employee refers
to two bodies - the council executive made up of the town clerk and heads of
departments and the Commission, which is an albatross to the ratepayers.

      The common worker, who happens to be the goose that lays the
golden eggs, is inconsequential, according to the commission.

      Morale among the rank and file of the employees is at its lowest
ebb, affecting the capacity of the council to improve its services.

      At the heart of the problem is this Commission, which without
reason or conscience wishes to punish the city worker.

      In January and February this year, when inflation was pegged at
815%, the same Commission decidedly awarded a 60 and 70% adjustment
respectively and assured the employees that this was only meant as an
exercise to cushion workers during these hard times.

      The Poverty Datum Line was then only $20 million. Now inflation
has gone beyond the 1 000% mark while the Poverty Datum Line is $41 million.

      But the commission feels that its poverty-stricken employees can
manage with a 30% adjustment.  What hogwash when this translates into a
paltry $7 million basic salary for the lowest paid council worker. Who would
survive on this figure? Many questions abound.

      Are these not the same peripatetic officials who blew almost $1
billion last year on a purported learning tour of Moscow, where they were
impressed to find that council workers are handsomely paid to the extent of
affording a holiday?

      Are these not the very commissioners who last month awarded
themselves an allowance of $150 million each for the five-day Zimbabwe
International Trade Fair in Bulawayo? How do they expect the lowest paid
council worker to survive on $7 million in a whole month?

      If the government sees sense in linking its workers' salaries
with inflation and at least pays its lowest paid worker $14 million-tax
free, why is the commission not following the same line?

      We also wonder why the Minister is not taking any action against
the Commission for failing to implement his directive to pay workers
inflation-adjusted salaries. The Minister should demonstrate that he meant
business by being firm with those that defy his orders.

       It's time  for the non-performing Commsion to go! Someone must
show the lot of them the door.

      T Vulcan
      Glen View
       Harare

---------
Correcting damaging misconceptions about Johanne Marange sect
      THERE are so many misconceptions about the Johanne Marange sect,
which as a member of the sect, I would like to correct for the benefit of
your readers.

      Some people claim that a girl is instructed by a church member
who to marry and that this usually happens after the church member has seen
a vision or has had a dream. This is a complete fabrication of the truth. It
is a lie!

      No such thing happens. In fact, young men propose love to girls
and get married just like everyone else. And the rules and regulations are
like in any of the other churches - no sex before marriage and being
faithful to one's partner.

      It is also suggested that a member of the church who marries an
outsider becomes an outcast. Again this not true. Boys and girls are
encouraged - not forced - to marry within the church because of the desire
to maintain the ideals of the church throughout their married life.

      Polygamy is not forced on anyone but is found among church
members probably because of calls made during the 1930s by the founder of
the church. These calls were made to ensure the growth of the membership of
the church.

      Cases of forced marriages or relations with under-age girls are
referred to and dealt with  by the police.

      I hope that that this, in some measure, tries to assist most
Zimbabweans to understand the operations of the Johanne Marange sect.

      Just like any other denomination, it has its own rules and
regulations. It would a mockery of one's spiritual probity to utter false
things about any church. Even the Bible counsels against this.

      T P Z
      Western Triangle
       Harare


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Lack of co-ordination costs city millions



      May 14, 2006

      By ANDnetwork .com

      Confusion and lack of co-ordination within the ranks of the City of
Harare recently saw the local authority losing millions of dollars after its
waste management department hired refuse compactors from a private company
to replace broken-down ones when the Department of Works had the same
equipment that was functioning.

      This embarrassing episode has prompted calls for the city's
departments to co-ordinate activities to avoid the unnecessary loss of
revenue.

      The commission running the affairs of the City of Harare recently
heard during a meeting that the city's equipment which included a D4 dozer
and D7 dozer had been grounded in the workshops since 2000 awaiting repairs
and that council has been hiring such equipment ever since.

      Acting director of works Engineer Michael Jaravaza told a procurement
board meeting that there was urgent need for landfill management equipment
to push and compact refuse at dumpsites which were now posing fire and
health hazards to the public.

      "Several complaints have been received from residents regarding the
bad state of the dumpsites," the commission heard.

      The procurement board committee said R. Davis and Company was
contracted to supply plant and equipment in 2005, but the contract had since
expired.

      The board inquired whether the D4 and D7 dozers could not be repaired
by the city's own engineers.

      Engineer Jaravaza's representative said the equipment could be
repaired in-house if funds for purchase of spares were made available,
adding that the department of works had equipment to perform the task.

      "The board was advised that the Department of Works had several
front-end loaders which were operational and could be hired by the waste
management department.

      "The board felt that consultations should have been done in-house to
determine the equipment which was available from other departments and
encouraged the inter-departmental hiring of equipment as this would save
council a lot of money," said Eng Jaravaza.

      A representative of the acting director of waste management, Mr
Emmanuel Muza, said a tipper truck and front-end loader would be hired from
the Department of Works.

      Source : Sunday Mal


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15 feared dead of cholera



      May 14, 2006

      By ANDnetwork .com

      Fitheen people are feared to have died of cholera last week after an
outbreak of the disease in Kachuta, 46 km north-west of Guruve centre in
Mashonaland Central in Zimbabwe

      No official confirmation of the deaths could be obtained yesterday. It
is said the first death occurred early in the week when a person from
Kachuta area attended a funeral in the Dande area where he contracted
cholera after eating contaminated fish from Cabora Bassa Dam in Mozambique.

      died after returning to Kachuta and people who attended his funeral
also contacted cholera resulting in the disease spreading to other areas
such as Chikwidibe, Gota, Masvitsi, Chimufombo and Nyangavi.

      The Ministry of Health and Child Welfare dispatched health personnel
to the affected areas on Tuesday while the Civil Protection Unit (CPU) held
a meeting yesterday after visiting the affected areas.

      When The Sunday Mail visited Guruve yesterday, all senior officers at
Guruve District Hospital were said to be out visiting affected areas.

      The Mashonaland Central provincial medical director and provincial
environmental health officer are said to have told nurses at Guruve Hospital
that anyone seeking information should contact them.

      No comment could be obtained from the two by the time of going to
press as their cellphones were not reachable while their landlines rang
continuously without being answered.

      It was also not clear yesterday whether the situation had been brought
under control. Cholera has been a cause for concern in Zimbabwe since late
last year. Fourteen people have died of the disease since December.

      Source : Sunday Mail

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