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Mugabe prepares for a brutal and violent campaign

http://www.thezimbabwemail.com

13 November, 2010 03:21:00    Global Post

HARARE, Zimbabwe — President Robert Mugabe's preparations for the 2011
elections include looting Zimbabwe's state resources to fund violent
intimidation, said a prominent economist.

Determined to prevent Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai’s Movement for
Democratic Change from winning a majority in the next parliament, Mugabe is
going to pull out all the stops, said Zimbabwean economist and commentator
John Robertson, speaking at the Institute for Security Studies in Pretoria.

And the state coffers are much fuller thanks to Zimbabwe's recent diamond
windfall. The international sales of diamonds has brought in hundreds of
millions of dollars.

Mugabe’s health appears to have made a ZANU-PF victory in 2011 a more
pressing objective, Robertson said. He said that ZANU-PF's top officials
believe that Mugabe must win reelection and then retire after nominating a
successor who will look after the party’s interests.

Mugabe, 86, has refused to discuss his retirement and denies being in poor
health. But a television interview in September showed him slumped and
distracted, mindlessly repeating his mantras of the past.

“A sense of urgency has gripped the party in recent weeks because of the
president’s health,” Robertson said. “Many Zimbabweans are bracing
themselves for this unknown and for an electioneering onslaught that will
follow as ZANU-PF tries to stamp its authority on the entire population.”

The pattern of ZANU-PF's violence and coercion is already evident.

Police have been deployed throughout the country and there have been
recruitment drives to boost the membership of the Youth Militia. Many rural
communities have been forced to attend ZANU-PF indoctrination meetings. This
is all similar to 2008 when Mugabe enlisted enforcers and unleashed violence
against the opposition.

“All the images conjured up point to all too familiar recurrences of
collectivized violence and intimidation, accompanied by promises of
punishment to follow if the community dares to oppose the party,” Robertson
said.

He said Mugabe was deliberately undermining the MDC’s efforts to improve the
country’s economy as a way of discrediting the former opposition party ahead
of elections.

Mugabe told ZANU-PF's Youth League last month that they should prepare for
elections in mid-2011.

Diplomats, however, have warned that such a date is not advisable. Credible
elections will depend upon constitutional and electoral reforms and
international supervision, according to former Swedish ambassador Sten
Rylander.

“It would be better and less dangerous to lay a good and solid foundation in
the form of a new constitution and necessary electoral reforms and then go
for elections,” Rylander said.

He said Zimbabwe needs a revitalized private sector before it can move
forward. Production is nowhere near where it was 10 to 15 years ago, he
said.

“The international community can do something,” he said. “But not cover up
for this enormous loss of productive capacity.”

Among the formidable obstacles in the way of private-sector recovery is the
uncertainty surrounding minerals and diamonds due to lack of transparency,
observers point out.

Mugabe called Tsvangirai’s appeal to foreign governments not to recognize
diplomats appointed without consultation “foolish and stupid.” Mugabe then
repeated his old slogan: “the only good imperialist is a dead imperialist.”

“Who is Tsvangirai to tell me to go?” Mugabe asked indignantly. He warned
the MDC against reversing gains “brought through the barrel of a gun.”

It is precisely this kind of incitement by Mugabe, that worries Britain and
the United States which want to see stability in Zimbabwe before elections.
The U.S. embassy in Harare said Zimbabwe should show that it respects the
rule of law and human rights before the U.S. will consider lifting
sanctions.

This comes after three leaders of neighboring southern African states
proposed visiting Washington to persuade President Barack Obama to lift
sanctions against Zimbabwe. The leaders suggested going as representatives
of the 15-nation Southern African Development Community, which has
consistently supported Mugabe. The U.S. responded that there would have to
be tangible changes first.

“We welcome SADC’s engagement in helping to return Zimbabwe to a democratic
path,” said a statement released by the embassy, “but as senior U.S.
officials told members of Zimbabwe’s reengagement team on September 23,
Zimbabwe must make further progress for the removal of sanctions.”

This appears to have stung Mugabe. He heaped scorn on the MDC’s close ties
to the West.
“What are they to you?” he asked. “Your thinking can only be complete when
the white men say this is right. Why do they [the MDC] keep running to the
Europeans?”

Mugabe has long posed as the authentic spokesman of African nationalism in
order to command respect across the continent and to stay in power for more
than 30 years. But a generation for whom the 1970s liberation war against
Rhodesian rule is not even a distant memory is unlikely to fall for the
blandishments of a widely discredited ruler. Mugabe's party won only a
single urban seat in 2008 and observers believe he will lose many more, even
in his rural heartland, if free and fair polls are held next year.

The political casualties littering the field of battle in 2008 resembled the
fate of the French chivalry at Agincourt, one observer noted. Some of Mugabe’s
most prominent ministers went down to defeat.

“Despite his recourse to threats and violence the outcome next year is
likely to be even more devastating for him,” the observer said. “He is
completely out of touch.”


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MDC To Boycott Polls If There Is Violence - Tsvangirai

http://news.radiovop.com

12/11/2010 16:13:00

Bulawayo, November 12, 2010 - PRIME Minister, Morgan Tsvangirai has said his
Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) party will boycott planned elections
next year if Zanu-PF supporters wage a campaign of violence and
intimidation.

Tsvangirai, addressing party supporters at Beit Hall, Luveve in the country’s
second city on Friday, said the MDC is ready for polls to undo a unity
government he described as not functioning properly.

“We want elections next year to end this unhappy marriage with Zanu-PF.

"The MDC is ready for the elections but as a party, we will not participate
in any election if there are incidences of violence and intimidation against
out supporters,” Tsvangirai said to a wide applause from hundreds of party
supporters.

The MDC leader, who was accompanied by senior party officials, is holding
consultative meetings with party supporters countrywide ahead of planned
polls next year.

Tsvangirai in 2008 boycotted a presidential run-off polls against President
Robert Mugabe citing intimidation and violence that resulted in the death of
hundreds of MDC supporters and the displacement of scores of others.

Mugabe has reiterated that the country will for elections mid next year with
or without a new constitution to undo a power sharing agreement with the
former opposition MDCs.

Tsvangirai also dismissed the ongoing constitution making process as a
failure and described it is a transitional document which will be undone by
an MDC government once elected into power.

But the country’s premier said the current ongoing process to ‘draft a
transitional document is necessary to lay foundations for the holding of
violent free elections.

“We are participating in this constitutional making process because we are
in the GPA. The constitution that is going to come out from this process is
only transitional document to facilitate the holding of violent free
elections.

“…once the MDC is in power and not sharing power with Zanu-PF, a new
constitution will be drafted because this ongoing constitution making
process is a sham…” Tsvangirai added.

The constitution making process was marred by many problems, many related to
financial challenges and violence.

Zanu-PF supporters were accused of coercing to espouse the party’s views.


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Mugabe is dishonest - Tsvangirai

http://www.dailynews.co.zw

By Pindai Dube
Saturday, 13 November 2010 18:20

BULAWAYO - Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai says he no longer sees eye to
eye with President Robert Mugabe during their weekly cabinet meetings
because the Zanu PF leader, whom he described as a "crook " and a "dishonest
person",  continues to violate the GPA.

Addressing MDC supporters at a well attended meeting at the Luveve Beit
Hallin Bulawayo on Friday, Tsvangirai said he has given up on Mugabe in the
unity government and that the MDC -T wants early polls to end this  failed
power sharing agreement.

“Mugabe is a crook. Mugabe is a dishonest person. We do not see eye to eye
in cabinet. We don’t look at each other. The MDC has given up on Mugabe
because of his continued violation of the GPA and early elections are the
best option,” Tsvangirai said to a loud applause from hundreds of  his party
supporters.

The MDC leader, who was accompanied by senior party officials, is holding
consultative meetings with party supporters ahead of planned elections next
year. Mugabe stands accused of violating terms of the GPA through his
continued unilateral appointments of ambassadors, high court judges and
provisional governors.

Mugabe has also refused to honour some of the terms of the GPA saying
western imposed sanctions should be lifted first.

Tsvangirai said his party is ready for elections, but set terms  which he
said must be observed otherwise  the MDC-T will boycott  the polls.

“We want elections next year to end this unhappy marriage with Zanu PF. The
MDC is ready for the elections but as a party, we will not participate in
any election if there are incidents of violence and intimidation against out
supporters,” Tsvangirai said.

Mugabe has reiterated that the country will  go for elections mid next year
with or without a new constitution to undo the ill conceived  power sharing
agreement signed with the two MDCs in September 2008.Tsvangirai dismissed
the ongoing constitution making process as a failure and described it is a
transitional document which will be undone by an MDC government once elected
into power.

The country’s premier said the current ongoing process to draft a
constitution document is necessary to lay foundation for the holding of
violence free elections.

“We are participating in this constitutional making process because we are
in the GPA. The constitution that is going to come out of  this process is
only a transitional document to facilitate the holding of violence free
elections.

“Once the MDC is in power and not sharing power with Zanu-PF, a new
constitution will be drafted because the ongoing constitution making process
is a sham” Tsvangirai added.


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Zimbabwe Activists Say Election Violence Threats ZANU-PF 'Psychological Warfare'

http://www.voanews.com/

With election fever gripping Zimbabwe following President Robert Mugabe’s
recent call for dissolution of the unity government, many organizations and
individuals fear the return of political violence like that seen in the
bloody 2008 elections

Sandra Nyaira | Washington 12 November 2010

Human rights activists are describing as psychological warfare reports that
ZANU-PF has launched a new operation targeting MDC supporters in rural
communities.

An article published Friday on the Radio VOP Web site quoted an unnamed
ZANU-PF official as saying the party has launched "Operation Headless
Chicken" threatening to behead MDC supporters in the next elections some see
coming next year following statements to that effect by President Robert
Mugabe.

The campaign was reportedly launched in Mount Darwin, Mashonaland Central
province, a ZANU-PF stronghold.

ZANU-PF Mashonaland Central Chairman Dickson Mafios says his party has not
launched any such operation.

With election fever gripping many in Zimbabwe following President Mugabe’s
recent call for dissolution of the unity government due to seemingly
intractable differences among its partners, many organizations and
individuals fear the return of political violence like that seen in the
bloody 2008 presidential run-off election.

Activists are urging political leaders, including the unity government
principals, to avoid loose talk that will fuel violence ahead of any
possible election.

Democracy and Governance Manager Joy Mabenge of the Institute for a
Democratic Alternative for Zimbabwe says that if reports about the operation
are accurate, then ZANU-PF is now in full campaign mode and engaging in
psychological warfare to frighten potential MDC supporters in rural areas.


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MDC condemns Zanu PF stronghold of the airwaves

http://www.dailynews.co.zw/

By Staff Reporter
Saturday, 13 November 2010 18:29

HARARE - The MDC-T is incensed by the recent announcement by the Permanent
Secretary in the Ministry of Media, Information and Publicity George
Charamba that the government has no intention of issuing broadcasting
licences to private players.

In a hard hitting response, the MDC-T said in a statement that the
announcement  represents a manifestation of the tentacles of the
dictatorship beast.

“Charamba’s statements before the Media, Information and Communication
Technology parliamentary portfolio committee are a reflection of his party’s
dictatorial tendencies which the people of Zimbabwe will do away with in the
next elections,” the statement said.

“By maintaining the status quo and denying the entry of private
broadcasters, Charamba and his masters are desperately trying to prop-up
Zanu PF’s declining grip through the airwaves ahead of elections expected
next year,” the MDC- T said.

The MDC-T said  while Charamba admitted that there are no clear regulations
on political advertising, ZBC is churning out Zanu PF propaganda, bordering
on hate language hourly while advertisements of national interests such as
the Constitution – making process are denied space.

“The Zanu PF jingles being played for free are fanning divisions and
peddling hate language. Whereas Charamba asserts that the Zimbabwe Electoral
Commission (ZEC) regulates advertising in the election period, the jingles
are overtly campaigning for a single political party and its leader at a
time when there are no elections in the country. The jingles are being
played contrary to provisions of Article 19.1(e) of the GPA which clearly
stipulates that the public and private media should refrain from using
abusive language that may incite political intolerance or that unfairly
undermines political parties and other organisations,” the MDC said.

Last week the secretary general of the smaller faction of the MDC, Welshman
Ncube told a media workshop in Harare that it is regrettable that the media
reforms agreed to by the three parties in the GPA have not been implemented,
particularly in the broadcasting sector.


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CSOs to meet SADC over Zimbabwe’s political impasse

http://www.apanews.net

APA-Harare (Zimbabwe) Zimbabwe’s civil society organizations (COs) will meet
the Southern African Development Community (SADC) executive secretary Tomaz
Augusto Salomao on 22 November in Botswana to discuss ways of resolving the
country’s long-running political crisis, privately-run radio station "SW
Radio Africa" reported on Saturday in Harare.

SW Radio Africa, operated by exiled Zimbabweans based in London, quoted an
official of pressure group "Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition" as saying the CSOs
would meet Salamao and his team on 22 November in Gaborone, Botswana.

“It will be the first of three meetings we will have in Botswana,” the
official said.

The other two meetings are with Botswana civil society organizations and
government officials.

The CSOs’ regional engagement comes at a time when SADC mediator South
African President Jacob Zuma said he would not support an election in
Zimbabwe that is marred by violence, intimidation and a suppressed media
environment.

Zuma’s International Affairs advisor Lindiwe Zulu told the media this week
that the mediator wanted to see a conducive environment for free and fair
elections before the polls are held in Zimbabwe.

Zimbabwe’s CSOs, under the banner of the "Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition", in
October held “ice-breaking” consultations with Zuma’s three-member
facilitation team in Pretoria, South Africa.

It was the first time under South Africa’s mediation role that CSOs had been
given an opportunity to contribute to what a roadmap to solve the Zimbabwe
crisis should look like.

Political conditions in Zimbabwe have worsened during the past two months
amid an escalating dispute between President Robert Mugabe and Prime
Minister Morgan Tsvangirai over appointments of senior coalition government
officials.

The dispute has prompted Mugabe to threaten to call for elections next year
whether or not the country has completed an ongoing process to draft a new
Constitution.

JN/ad/APA
2010-11-13


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South African Mediators Say Zimbabwe Needs Roadmap to Free, Peaceful Elections

http://www.voanews.com

Lindiwe Zulu, a senior aide to South African President Jacob Zuma, mediator
for the Southern African Development Community, said Friday that Pretoria
will not bless an election marred by violence and intimidation

Blessing Zulu | Washington 12 November 2010

The South African government is downplaying talk of elections in Zimbabwe in
2011, saying it will insist that the three principals in the Harare unity
government implement a roadmap to elections as mandated by the Southern
African Development Community, a guarantor of power sharing with the African
Union.

Lindiwe Zulu, a top aide to President Jacob Zuma of South Africa, SADC's
mediator in Harare, said Friday that Pretoria will not bless an election
marred by violence and intimidation.

She said Mr. Zuma will discuss the election roadmap with the three
principals - President Robert Mugabe, Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai and
Deputy Prime Minister Arthur Mutambara, respectively head of the long-ruling
ZANU-PF and rival formations of the Movement for Democratic Change.

A roadmap has to be established first, that will involve [2008 Global
Political Agreement] principals, SADC and relevant people to ensure that any
elections that will be held will be free and fair," Zulu said.

"President Zuma is of the view that if elections should be done there should
be no violence, no intimidation and there should be a free media
environment,” she said.

There have also been calls from a number of directions for the reform of
repressive laws such as the Public Order and Security Act and the Access to
Information and Protection of Privacy Act which critics say curtail freedom
of association and assembly in the case of POSA, and restrict the media, in
the case of AIPPA.

SADC leaders are increasingly concerned at the deteriorating political
climate in Harare and want Mr. Zuma to be firm with Mr. Mugabe, saying the
crisis stands to have a negative impact on the entire region, sources say.

Mr. Mugabe recently declared that has relations in the unity government have
deteriorated so badly that the power-sharing arrangement must end by June of
next year, triggering a new round of elections.

But talk of elections has escalated tensions in the country with reports of
liberation war veterans, soldiers and ZANU-PF youth militia terrorizing
rural inhabitants in Manicaland and Masvingo provinces.

Both MDC formations welcomed Pretoria's call for an election roadmap.

ZANU-PF spokesman Rugare Gumbo referred all questions to Justice Minister
Patrick Chinamasa, chief negotiator for the party in power-sharing talks
since 2008. But Chinamasa was not immediately available.

Zulu said Pretoria has not been officially informed on the tension in
Harare, but is closely following developments.


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Senate row to hurt MDC legislative reforms

http://www.zimonline.co.za

by Own Correspondent     Saturday 13 November 2010

HARARE – The row over provincial governors and the subsequent early
adjournment of Zimbabwe’s Senate could hurt the MDC-T’s legislative agenda
amid fears that ZANU PF would use the row to block reforms pushed by the
former opposition party, analysts have warned.

Zimbabwe’s senate has been adjourned until February 8 next year following a
protest by lawmakers from Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai’s MDC-T over the
unilateral appointment of provincial governors by President Robert Mugabe.

The decision to adjourn senate sitting was taken after MDC-T senators
disrupted proceedings in the Upper House for two days last week in protest
at what they said was the presence of “intruders”.

The MDC lawmakers were protesting the presence of members of Mugabe’s ZANU
PF who were appointed provincial governors by the veteran leader last month
without consulting his partners in a power-sharing government formed in
2009.

Under a power-sharing pact signed by Mugabe, Tsvangirai and the leader of a
breakaway MDC faction in 2008, the 86-year-old Zimbabwean president should
consult his coalition partners before appointing senior regime officials.

Mugabe has refused to implement a formula agreed by the three political
leaders last year on how to allocate the country’s 10 provincial governor
positions among their parties.

Under the formula, Tsvangirai’s MDC was supposed to nominate five governors
by virtue of being the party with the largest number of parliamentary seats.
ZANU PF would get four positions while the smaller MDC faction led by Deputy
Prime Minister Arthur Mutambara gets one appointment.

Presently all the 10 governors are ZANU PF members.

The MDC-T has vowed to continue disrupting senate proceedings until the
contentious issue of the governors is addressed.

Provincial governors are ex-officio members of the Zimbabwean senate.

Veritas, a Harare-based non-governmental organisation that monitors Zimbabwe’s
legal climate, said the suspension of senate business would likely delay the
passing of pending bills, which require the consent of both the Senate and
House of Assembly.

“During the adjournment of the Senate it will be impossible for Parliament
to complete the passage of any Bills in the ordinary way, i.e. with both
Houses assenting to them,” the group said.

Nevertheless Schedule 4, paragraph 5, of the Constitution contains special
provision for the enactment – without Senate approval – of a Bill certified
by a Vice-President or Minister to be “so urgent that it is not in the
national interest to delay its enactment”.

“But it is difficult to see any of the Bills presently awaiting attention
qualifying for that description,” Veritas said.

If a Bill not certified as urgent by a Vice-President or Minister has been
passed by the House of Assembly but not by the Senate, it may be sent to the
President for assent, but only after the expiry of 90 days.

This means that most of the Bills may not become law until mid-February
2011, which may be too late if Mugabe goes ahead with his threat to dissolve
the coalition government within the next three months.

Bills already in Parliament include the Zimbabwe National Security Council
Amendment Bill, which was passed by the House of Assembly last week and
transmitted to the Senate, the Public Order and Security Act (POSA)
Amendment Bill and the Attorney General’s Office Bill.

The POSA Amendment Bill is still awaiting the committee stage in the House
of Assembly while the Attorney-General’s Office Bill is being perused by the
parliamentary legal committee.

Veritas said an early recall of the Senate was possible if the issue of
provincial governors was resolved before 8 February 2011.

“Senate Standing Order 187 empowers the President of the Senate, at the
request of President Mugabe, to recall the Senate for an earlier meeting if
the “public interest” so requires,” the group said.

This is unlikely to happen since Mugabe and ZANU PF have resisted moves by
the MDC-T to push for legislative reforms seen as key to levelling the
political playing field.


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Zimbabwe Enemies Unite on Tobacco

http://online.wsj.com

NOVEMBER 13, 2010

By FARAI MUTSAKA

HARARE, Zimbabwe—For years, Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe and his
allies have sought to drive white farmers from their land, and the farmers
have fought back through the courts.

In recent weeks, the World Health Organization has managed to bring the two
warring camps together by attacking one of their few shared interests:
tobacco.

The WHO's Framework Convention on Tobacco Control seeks to cut global
production and demand for a crop that is the lifeblood of Zimbabwe's
economy—accounting for 26% of gross domestic product in 2009, according to
the Ministry of Finance. The 171 countries that are party to the convention
will meet in Uruguay next week. Zimbabwe officials and farmers—white and
black—are banding together to explore how to respond to a treaty that could
derail the country's fragile recovery after a decade of economic and
political tumult.

"We have to set aside our differences to save the country's economy," said
Kevin Cooke, president of the Zimbabwe Tobacco Association, the main tobacco
farmers' body. "There are no alternative crops that come near tobacco."
[ZIM]

Minister of Agriculture Joseph Made, a close ally of President Mugabe, says
the government is scrambling to save a dominant cash crop grown by the
country's largest and smallest of farmers, of all colors. "There are no
differences between us on this one," he says. "Everyone is working together
and certainly we hope this togetherness can last."

Mr. Made admits that Zimbabwe alone doesn't have much leverage, and says it
is relying on support from other countries that also oppose elements of the
treaty.

The show of unity is remarkable in the current political climate. The shared
government of President Mugabe's Zanu-PF party and Prime Minister Morgan
Tsvangirai's Movement for Democratic Change is nearing an end. Officials in
both parties, including Mr. Mugabe, say they want elections next year to
replace the troubled coalition government, but another vote risks a repeat
of the 2008 elections, in which hundreds are believed to have died in
political violence.

Zimbabwe's white farmers have tended to support Mr. Tsvangirai's party. The
prime minister has spoken out about the need to resolve land disputes in a
legal and transparent manner—a stance that appears to side with
international court decisions, including the Southern African Development
Community tribunal that in 2008 ruled in favor of the land rights of white
farmers. Mr. Mugabe's government has said it won't abide by that ruling.

It isn't clear how long the unlikely alliance can last. The killing last
month of Kobus Joubert, a leading white tobacco farmer and former president
of the ZTA, highlights the insecurity faced by the few remaining white
farmers. Police have described Mr. Joubert's death has been described by
police as occurring during a robbery, but farmer representatives say such
violence has often been part of the farm evictions supported by Mr. Mugabe.

Today, fewer than 300 whites remain on farms, down from 4,500 when evictions
started about a decade ago, according to Deon Theron, president of the
Commercial Farmers Union. "Our members are still being violently evicted
even when they have court orders on their side," he said.

But when it comes to tobacco, the fighting has stopped, for now. Tobacco is
Zimbabwe's biggest agricultural employer, providing jobs for 350,000 people;
an additional 500,000 work in related industries, such as cigarette
manufacturing, according to the government and farmer unions. In September,
Zimbabwe's finance minister raised projections for full-year economic growth
to slightly over 8% from its July forecast of 4.5%, largely because of
resurgent tobacco sales. The industry earns much-needed foreign currency
from its overseas sales of Burley tobacco, a product blended into such
famous cigarette brands as Altria Group Inc.'s Marlboro.

The WHO treaty would hit countries that grow Burley tobacco hard. The crop
requires blending with other ingredients that global health authorities deem
harmful. In the draft guidelines, the WHO urges member governments to
examine how to restrict or ban ingredients—such as those blended with
Burley—that increase the attractiveness of tobacco products, "as a tool to
help limit youth initiation," said a WHO spokesman, in an email response to
questions.

The treaty is expected to spearhead a global antitobacco campaign to reduce
consumption of tobacco products, which the WHO says kills five million
people a year, or one person every six seconds. Most of the deaths occur in
middle- and low-income countries, according to the WHO.

The International Tobacco Growers' Association has accused the WHO of
rushing ahead with regulation without fully understanding the impact on
tobacco farmers or directly consulting them. "If they are pushed to produce
something else what are they going to do? You lose millions of jobs," says
Antonio Abrunhosa, chief executive of the ITGA, which says it has 30 million
members world-wide. "Can you regulate chocolate without talking to chocolate
producers?"

A study funded by the ITGA, released Thursday, estimated 3.6 million jobs in
the tobacco-growing sector in five African countries were at risk because of
the WHO proposals. The report warned another 12 million people would be
affected by developments in the countries' tobacco sectors.

The Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa has also criticized the
WHO action, arguing that its members that grow types of tobacco that require
blending would suffer, according to a September communiqué. The trading bloc
urged its members to lobby the WHO for a more industry-friendly treaty.

The WHO spokesman says a number of African countries are part of working
groups currently drafting the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control.
Zimbabwe isn't yet among them. Mr. Cooke of the Zimbabwe Tobacco Association
says it has been skeptical of the treaty's goals of ending tobacco use
without coming up withoffering viable alternative crops.

Recently, however, both the government and the farmer groups have agreed
that Zimbabwe should join the WHO treaty group, in a bid to help shape
future tobacco regulations.

Says Mr. Made, the agriculture minister: "We cannot fight from outside and
win."
—Peter Wonacott in Johannesburg contributed to this article.


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Air Zim Property Saved For Now

http://news.radiovop.com

12/11/2010 15:54:00

Harare, November 12, 2010 - Air Zimbabwe survived for another day from
having its property attached by the Deputy Sherriff to compensate workers
who are claiming US$ 500 000 in unpaid allowances.

The national airline on Wednesday saw its property which included top of the
range vehicles and buses being attached by the Deputy Sherriff.

The airline however survived the ordeal after it filed an urgent High Court
application to stop the execution of property.

It further survived the attachment Friday after the High Court postponed the
matter to next Tuesday giving it more time to mobilise funds to pay about
400 workers.

Lawyers representing the workers told Radio VOP:“The matter has been
postponed to Tuesday next week. The writ of execution stays because Air
Zimbabwe argued that it made some payments but they have a grace period of
between now and Tuesday to show proof
of payment. In the meantime property attachment remains in force,” said
Kennedy Mucheche, a lawyers representing the workers.

“We want to determine what was paid and what was not paid, when that happens
we will instruct the Deputy Sherriff to attach property equivalent to the
money owed to workers.”

Air Zimbabwe Lawyers Selby Hwacha also confirmed the postponement. He said
the case had been postponed by consent.

"We were arguing that we overpaid the workers by US$ 48 000 but they argued
that they are still owed so they judge directed that we go and reconcile the
accounts and be back in court on Tuesday,” said Hwacha.

Air Zimbabwe is facing numerous operational problems ranging from lack of
capital, an aging fleet, a bulging workforce and general poor business as
many of its traditional customers opt for more modern aircraft such as those
operated by British Airways, Air link and South African Airways.


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Top cop linked to First Lady's love affairs dies

http://www.thezimbabwemail.com

12 November, 2010 11:26:00    Staff Reporter

HARARE – President Mugabe’s top cop Deputy Police Commissioner General in
charge for crime in the Zimbabwe Republic Police (ZRP), and a close family
friend Barbara Mandizha, has died leaving a whole string of catalogue of the
First Lady’s infidelity's stories unanswered.

Mandizha died in China on Thursday from what State media reported to be a
long battle with cancer.

She was one of very few senior police officers on travel restrictions
imposed by Western countries on President Mugabe and his loyalists.

Police spokesman Oliver Mandipaka confirmed her death and said her body was
expected to arrive in the country on Saturday next week.

She was the first woman to be promoted to the rank of Police Deputy
Commissioner, since Independence in 1980.

Before being promoted to the rank of Deputy Commissioner, Mandizha was the
officer commanding Police Support Unit, a highly trained unit in the ZRP
which supports other units of the police with specialist skills.

She was married to Grain Marketing Board general manager, Albert Mandizha, a
former Senior Assistant Commissioner and Commander of police in Bulawayo.

The late Mrs Mandizha was one of very few people close to President Mugabe’s
family and a very close friend of the First Lady Grace Mugabe

In some of the First Lady's reported cases of infidelity, the then Morris
Depot Commandant, Barbara Mandizha is alleged to have warned both exiled
Zimbabwean businessman James Makamba and the First Lady that their affair
would soon be in public, when she saw Grace driving Makamba into his Telecel
offices located near the police general headquarters at the corner of
Chinamano and Seventh Street.

A few months later James Makamba was arrested on trumped up charges and kept
in prison for months without trial. Grace secretly arranged for him to be
granted bail so he could skip and leave the country.

The plan worked, Makamba was granted bail and was driven to Beitbridge
boarder post by police details handpicked by Mrs Mandizha.

Makamba fled into South Africa where he stayed a few months before leaving
for Egypt.

Mugabe took over James Makamba's Telecel the second largest cellular
operator in Zimbabwe.

In another incident Winston Changara, President Mugabe's Aide De Camp, a
senior police officer was said to be one Grace Mugabe’s many boyfriends.

The pair was caught making love by a police sergeant Isaac W. S. Mabhungu
who was managing senior officer's mess at a police flat inside senior
officer's mess at ZRP's Morris Depot.

The sergeant alerted Barbara Mandizha who was Commandant Depot and a police
inspector, Anna Chiwetu but they warned him that the case was
over-sensitive. The sergeant was to keep quiet forever until he was forced
to resign in March 2006."

He was later found dead in a forest between Warren Park and the National
Sports Stadium.

During the 2008 general elections Mrs Mandizha barred Pan African Parliament
(PAP) election observer team from witnessing junior officers who were being
forced to vote for President Robert Mugabe at police general headquarters in
Harare.

Deputy Police Commissioner General Barbara Mandizha was present at general
headquarters in room 50, keeping an eye on junior officers as they marked
their ballots for Mugabe.

It has also been reported that Mrs Mandizha took charge of the controversial
postal votes command Centre.


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Mugabe forces Chombo's wife to give in

http://www.thezimbabwemail.com

12 November, 2010 10:45:00    Staff Reporter

HARARE - President Mugabe has forced his corky Local Government, Rural and
Urban Development Minister Ignatius Chombo's estranged wife Marian to narrow
her claims to the family's property on divorce amid reports of threats being
made to her life by State spy agents.

A pre-trial conference at the High Court cleared the way on how to split
most of the property in dispute after an intervention by President Mugabe,
sources said.

Sources said on Wednesday night, President Mugabe who is related to Dr
Chombo, summoned the warring couples and pressured Marian to take what was
available.

He also warned her not to use the media in their dispute. The poor woman was
threatened of unspecified actions if she pursued an agenda the President
said would tarnish the party and his image ahead of crucial general
elections.

The major disagreement in the initial summons and pleas was over just what
property did exist that had to be split.

But many items on the list submitted by Mrs Chombo in her reply to Dr Chombo’s
summons have now been dropped and the divisions already agreed, or still in
dispute, are generally those on Dr Chombo’s list with a few additions.

Both parties now agree Dr Chombo can keep a Norton stand, one of the two
Queensdale blocks of four flats, a two-bedroomed flat on Mutare Road, a Mica
Point stand in Kariba, a Glen View house, a Ruwa stand, two stands in
Chinhoyi and all implements bought on hire purchase at Allan Grange Farm.

Mrs Chombo will get, by agreement, one bus, six truck horses, three
trailers, a tanker, an 8-tonne truck, a Land Cruiser, a green Mercedes-Benz,
a twin-cab Hardbody, a Nissan Wolf, the Greendale matrimonial home, the
other block of four flats in Queensdale, the other Mutare Road two-bedroomed
flat, two Shawasha Hills stands, the other Glen View house, the Ruwa plot
and machinery on it, and all furniture at Allan Grange and an Alexandra Park
house.

Dr Chombo refused to surrender 20 Borrowdal stands.

Marian will also gets half the livestock on Allan Grange Farm.

Still to be decided by a judge is whether five other properties are subject
to division and if so how should they be distributed.

These are a Mount Pleasant house, which Dr Chombo says he leases but does
not own, a flat in the Avenues and a house in Avondale West, which Dr Chombo
says belongs to his son and a relative, a house in Alexandra Park that Dr
Chombo wants to keep, Allan Grange Farm and its equipment, and the
Government and parliamentary vehicles.

The judge will also have to decide if Mrs Chombo will receive any
maintenance; she is now asking for US$500 a month, down from her original
claim of US$2 000.

Dr Chombo sued his wife for divorce last year, offering her a list of
property very similar to what was finally agreed, minus the bus.

He also listed the property that he would like to keep as his share.

Mrs Chombo replied, but appended a much longer list of property she said had
to be divided.

Dr Chombo replied stating that four of the vehicles on Mrs Chombo’s list
were actually Govern-ment or party vehicles, and so could not be subject to
the divorce settlement.

He denied owning, or even knowing about, quite a lot of the property listed
by Mrs Chombo.

Dr and Mrs Chombo were married in 1993 under the Marriages Act, although
they had an older customary union, and have two grown-up children. They
split up around three years ago, but had an agreement made after their
marriage that if they divorced they would split the property they had
acquired evenly.

Dr Chombo is represented by Manase and Manase, while Mrs Chombo is
represented by Sinyoro and Partners.


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Family, friends and elephants



Dear Family and Friends,

Under a wide blue sky a warthog and her three babies ran across a red
dirt road below a kopje. The piglets ran with tails straight up, like
aerials, as they followed their mum into the surrounding bush. In the
sky nearby half a dozen vultures circled low over a clearing and in
the distance, the haunting call of a fish eagle promised water, fish
and the myriad treasures waiting discovery in our beautiful Zimbabwe.

A couple of hundred people had gathered at the foothills of Castle
Kopje in Wedza. A beautiful kopje, her rocks stained orange with
lichen and balancing precariously on top of each other. We sat under a
great Acacia tree watching a couple of young black rhinos browsing
nearby, waiting for the proceedings to begin.

Our host told us this was a traditional Shona burial ground, a sacred
place, and that he’d had to get permission from the local Chief to
bury his mother here. Just seven months ago we had been in this same
place to bury his father, Norman Travers, here.

The service began and one after another the eulogies told of how Gill
Travers was a loving, dedicated and endlessly creative woman. A woman
who made her home in the African bush, raised her family there and
then shared it all with lions, leopards, hyaenas and otters. Gill’s
doctor said she was the only patient he had who had been bitten by a
hyaena and then an otter; the only patient who needed a leopard’s
claw removed from her forearm!

Alongside giraffe and elephants, rhinos and warthogs, Gill and Norman
Travers farmed the land and created a game park which attracted
tourists from all over the world. They began outreach programmes with
rural schools, endlessly spreading the message of conservation, and
they held open days for local elders, headmen and chiefs.

Working with the Department of National Parks, they took in black
rhinos ravaged by poaching, and embarked on a unique programme,
rearing the calves and then and returning them to the wild. Gill and
her catering partner Mattheus prepared milk formulas in bottles for
rhinos and cream teas and venison casseroles for visiting guests all
in the same farm kitchen! The perfect team creating what Gill’s
grandson called an “oasis.” Nineteen years ago Gill Travers was
diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease but she fought on undeterred,
always welcoming, cheerful and uncomplaining. Gill finally gave up her
valiant struggle this week and watched by family, friends and
elephants was laid to rest in the ground she so loved.

I write this letter today in memory of Norman and Gill Travers who lie
side by side under an Acacia tree beneath Castle Kopje on Imire Game
Park in Wedza. Almost two years ago Norman and Gill invited me into
their home and week after week we worked on a book together. They told
me the amazing story of how a piece of virgin bush in Wedza was
farmed, nurtured and transformed. Norman spoke of a “stream of
naughty, smelly, little animals” filling their lives and Gill of how
much she loved them all and how proud she was of her family continuing
with their life’s work.

*“Imire, the Life and Times of Norman Travers,”* will be available
within the next fortnight, please contact me for further information.

To Norman and Gill Travers: Fambai zvakanaka, thank you for giving us
Imire, such a gem. Until next time, love cathy Copyright � Cathy
Buckle. 13 November 2010 www.cathybuckle.com

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