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Civic group warns of fresh political conflict

http://www.dailynews.co.zw

By Guthrie Munyuki
Saturday, 23 October 2010 16:05

HARARE - The Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition (The Coalition), has warned that
Zimbabwe could plunge into violent political conflict if the Southern
African Development Community (Sadc) fails to address outstanding issues
that have drawn sharp differences within the unity government.

"Zimbabwe's political environment remains poisoned with violence,
intimidation and fear, despite the constitution of the National Security
Council, which has failed to ensure meaningful civilian oversight over the
security forces and check the existence, as an alternative-governing centre
of the Joint Operations Command (JOC).

"Without external assistance from SADC and its member states in the
management of elections and in setting up mechanisms to prevent violence,
the next election may be no different from the chaotic and violent June 2008
polls, if not worse," the Coalition said during its meeting with President
Jacob Zuma's representative team in Johannesburg last week.

It was the first time that Zuma's team , which has been negotiating and
trying to find a lasting solution to Zimbabwe's political woes, had met the
civil society.

The Coalition said that the implementation of the Global Political Agreement
(GPA) was  largely a 'box-ticking exercise' lacking  full compliance with
the agreement's letter and spirit.

"The real outstanding issue is holistic and actual implementation of the GPA
itself, especially as it relates to security sector reform and governance,
full restoration of the rule of law, respect for basic rights and freedoms
as well as other institutional reforms that will enable Zimbabwe to hold a
credible election, free of violence and whose outcome can be respected as
the will of the people.

"There is ample evidence that Zimbabwe's security sector remains highly
partisan, unprofessional and politicised. The National Security Council,
which was intended to provide civilian oversight to the security sector and
take a lead in reforming the sector, is barely functional," it said.

It charged that the inclusive government had not defined, in clear terms,
the roadmap to democratic, free and fair elections; neither did it stated
key benchmarks in that roadmap.

The Coalition bemoaned the continued politicisation of the security
institutions which it said could yet again be used in the future elections
to thwart the democratic will of Zimbabweans from prevailing in future
elections.

"Scores of cases relating to the 2008 electoral violence, in which victims
have named perpetrators in their reports to the police, have inexplicably
not been prosecuted.

"This perpetuation of the culture of impunity and the retention through lack
of action of security sector actors in the electoral and other political
processes will not bode well for credible elections in the near future, as
the state and its cohesive apparatus remains a major instigator of
politically motivated violence," said the Coalition.

President Robert Mugabe is accused of deliberately dishonouring the GPA to
frustrate Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai and his deputy Arthur Mutambara,
who both appended their signature to the historic pact that spawned the
inclusive government.

Mugabe has since declared that he won't extend the life of the GPA beyond
February next year after which Zimbabwe will hold elections to choose a new
government.

Tsvangirai has said he will fight it out with the veteran former guerrilla
in elections but wants Sadc and the international community to be actively
involved in the run up to, during and after the polls.

Civic and rights groups insist that the current political climate is not
conducive to holding free and fair elections.

"Electoral and Political Reforms implemented by the Inclusive Government so
far are not sufficient to create a conducive environment for Zimbabwe to
conduct an election that meets SADC standards on the conduct of democratic
elections.

"For instance, the Voters' Roll is outdated and requires a thorough cleanup,
while Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC) itself is yet to get its enabling
law that accord with the GPA, and the requisite financial wherewithal to
conduct its duties," observed the Coalition.

The Coalition challenged Zuma's facilitation team to insist on ensuring that
a credible election pitched on key benchmarks takes place in Zimbabwe.

It said the benchmarks for fresh elections should include ensuring that a
non-partisan public media exists which ensures that different political
actors have got access to public media, a transparent electoral process that
ensures greater transparency in all facets of the process and put in place
mechanisms to ensure the existence a clean voters' roll.

"SADC, as guarantor of Zimbabwe's GPA, must insist that Zimbabwe elections
comply with its Principles and Guidelines Governing Democratic Elections -
including impartiality of electoral institutions and non-interference in
electoral processes by the state security agents.

"Where resources to conduct the election become scarce or unavailable, we
request SADC and the AU to facilitate the pooling and availability of these
resources in order to make sure that Zimbabweans are given a chance to elect
a leadership of their own choice," said The Coalition.

Among a raft of recommendations, the Coalition urged Zuma to put pressure of
the government to put in place necessary administrative mechanisms that
ensure the Diaspora, differently-abled, prisoners and other marginalised
groups are not disenfranchised in all electoral processes.

Mugabe, Tsvangirai and Mutambara formed the inclusive government in February
2009 to end a decade of hostilities and quarreling.

There have been mixed reactions to its performance although it is credited
with stabilising the economy and halting hyperinflation.


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Slight improvement in media climate

http://www.zimonline.co.za/

by Own Correspondent Saturday 23 October 2010

HARARE - Zimbabwe weighed in at 123rd position in the latest press freedom
index published this week by Reporters Without Borders, showing a slight
improvement from last year despite the media environment in the country
remaining rather dicey for journalists.

According to the Paris-based Reporters Without Borders, Zimbabwe moved 13
places from last year's 136th position out of 175 countries, thanks to a
partial opening up of the media space following the licensing of new private
newspapers since May.

This year's index included 178 countries.

"Zimbabwe has again made some slow progress, as it did last year. The return
of independent dailies is a step forward for public access to information
but the situation is still very fragile," the media freedom watchdog said in
the 2010 World Press Freedom Index.

Zimbabwe's media environment has progressively improved since President
Robert Mugabe agreed to share power with former opposition leader - now
Prime Minister - Morgan Tsvangirai in 2008.

The country was ranked 151st out of 173 countries prior to the formation of
a coalition by Mugabe and Tsvangirai last year.

The coalition government has implemented some of the media reforms agreed in
the power-sharing agreement between Mugabe and Tsvangirai although it has
avoided instituting far-reaching measures that would drastically open up the
country's media space.

The reforms instituted so far included the establishment of the Zimbabwe
Media Commission (ZMC) and the licensing of at least nine private newspapers
to compete with the state-run titles that have dominated the country's media
landscape since 2003.

But reforms to open up Zimbabwe's media are likely to take much longer due
to reluctance by Mugabe's allies to allow press freedom.

More than a year after the coalition government was formed, the government
broadcaster Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation (ZBC) still dominates the
country's media.

The Broadcasting Authority of Zimbabwe has refused to license private
television or radio stations, forcing several radio stations to broadcast
into Zimbabwe from Europe or United States.

It however allowed the ZBC to launch a second television channel in May
underlining its dominance of the airwaves.

Pressure groups also continue called for the repeal of the draconian Access
to Information and Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA) and other laws that
restrict media freedom, blasting the government's piecemeal approach to
addressing media concerns.

AIPPA requires journalists and media houses to register with the government
and also criminalises the publication of "falsehoods".

It has been used to harass the independent media, with scores of journalists
arrested for operating without government accreditation and at least four
private newspapers shut down since 2003.

The arrests have continued as late as this month when a Kwekwe journalist
Flata Kavinga was detained for covering a demonstration by Catholic
parishoners who were protesting against their priest in the Midlands town.

He was released a day later to allow him to obtain proof of his ZMC
accreditation.


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Measles claim five lives a week

http://www.zimonline.co.za

by Own Correspondent Saturday 23 October 2010

HARARE - The UN says Zimbabwe's measles outbreak is claiming five lives a
week, four months after a nationwide immunisation campaign that targeted
more than five million children.

The UN said while suspected cases have declined from 248 to 85 per week, the
average weekly death toll of five was a cause for concern among the
humanitarian community.

"Following the (immunisation) campaign in the period 5 July to 12 September,
844 suspected cases and 53 deaths were reported," the UN's Office for the
Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said in its monthly humanitarian
update on Zimbabwe.

More than 11 744 suspected cases and 570 deaths have been reported since the
September 2009 when the outbreak started.

"In the last 30 days three districts, namely Bikita in Masvingo province,
Chipinge in Manicaland and Zvishavane in the Midlands have reported
confirmed outbreaks," the UN agency said.

The Zimbabwe government embarked on a nationwide measles vaccination
campaign in June to fight a rising measles outbreak and arrest plummeting
immunisation coverage.

The disease - that can be prevented through vaccination - was initially
confined to families of some religious groups whose followers refuse
conventional medical treatment but later spread to more areas countrywide.

The measles outbreak came barely a year after a cholera epidemic claimed
close to 5 000 lives as bankrupt local authorities failed to supply clean
drinking water to residents or provide garbage collection services.

The cholera epidemic was only brought under control after international aid
agencies moved in with water treatment chemicals as well as medicines and
health support staff to treat the disease.

Zimbabwe's health system was once one of the best in Africa but collapsed as
a severe recession over the past decade meant the government was unable to
build new hospitals or maintain existing ones, while poor salaries drove the
best trained doctors and nurses abroad where pay and working conditions are
better.

The power-sharing government between President Robert Mugabe and Prime
Minister Morgan Tsvangirai has promised to rebuild the economy and restore
basic services such as water supplies, health and education.

But the administration has found it hard to undertake any meaningful
reconstruction work after failing to get financial support from rich Western
nations that insist they want to see more political reforms before they can
loosen the purse strings.

 


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Zimbabwe PM Tsvangirai's Party Expresses Outrage Over Banning of Rallies by Police

http://www.voanews.com/

Analysts say the banning of Tsvangirai's rallies shows that ZANU-PF is now
in election mode following President Mugabe's speech last week that
elections will be held next year.

Chris Gande & Brenda Moyo | Washington 22 October 2010

Zimbabwean police are continuing to block Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai
from holding rallies with supporters of his Movement for Democratic Change
formation.

Mr. Tsvangirai was on Thursday evening expected to address a rally with his
supporters in Harare's Budiriro township but senior police officers moved in
and cancelled the meeting, his party said.

A similar meeting scheduled for Highfields was blocked on Wednesday. The MDC
criticised the police actions saying they were "inspired by fear."

Analysts say the banning of Tsvangirai's rallies shows that ZANU-PF is now
in election mode following President Robert Mugabe's speech last week that
elections will be held next year.

Tsvangirai MDC spokesperson, Nelson chamisa told VOA Studio 7 reporter Chris
Gande that police have banned Mr. Tsvangirai's meetings despite having been
notified of them well in advance.

In another development, the Tsvangirai MDC formation has launched a
broadside at Deputy Prime Minister Arthur Mutambara for statements he made
in parliament this week over the appointments of ambassadors by Mr. Mugabe.

Mutambara allegedly told the House of Assembly that only the Supreme Court
could determine whether Mr. Mugabe acted constitutionally or not by
appointing ambassadors and provincial governors of his ZANU-PF party without
consulting his governing MDC partners.

In a statement posted on its website, the Tsvangirai MDC said Mutambara was
acting like a "ZANU-PF sidekick."

Mutambara was not reachable for comment. But his party came to his defence,
denying he is endorsing Mugabe's unilateral actions.

Party spokesperson Edwin Mushoriwa told VOA Studio 7 reporter Brenda Moyo
his boss does not approve of Mr. Mugabe's violation of the Global Political
Agreement.


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Constitution Revision Panel Suspends Officials Over Data Mishandling

http://www.voanews.com

Select Committee co-chairman Paul Mangwana said the officials in question
were facing disciplinary hearing for mishandling the data.

Patience Rusere | Washington 22 October 2010

Zimbabwe's parliamentary select committee on constitution revision has
suspended some of its officials for allegedly mishandling data collected
during consultation meetings.

Sources said COPAC National Co-coordinator, Peter Kunjeku and a Data Manager
identified only as a Mrs Fundira, have been suspended following allegations
they mishandled data from four unnamed provinces.

The sources said Kunjeku stored the data from the four provinces in an
unsecured room at COPAC offices before moving it to the National Archives in
unsealed boxes without the select committee's permission.

The sources added that at a meeting held in Harare Thursday, the select
committee was instructed to move the data from its National Archives to a
secure place.

Select Committee co-chairman Paul Mangwana told VOA Studio 7 reporter
Patience Rusere the officials in question were facing disciplinary hearing
for mishandling data.


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Government Hires Auditors to Scrutinize State Enterprises' Finances

http://www.voanews.com

Sources said the Comptroller and Auditor-General has sub-contracted private
auditing firms to probe finances of the parastatals due to serious shortages
of state auditors.

Gibbs Dube | Washington 22 October 2010

The Zimbabwean government has hired several auditing firms to check
financial statements submitted by state enterprises to line ministries in
compliance with a state directive two months ago.

Sources said the Comptroller and Auditor-General has sub-contracted the
private auditing firms due to serious shortages of state auditors.

Most of them quit their jobs when Zimbabwe was paralyzed by a record
hyperinflation rate between 2000 and 2008.

The sources said the auditors started sifting through the financial
statements this week and are expected to complete their work within the next
two months.

State Enterprises Minister Gorden Moyo said most parastatals have now
submitted financial statements and salary structures to line ministries as
per the cabinet directive. The deadline for submitting the financial
statements, some back-dating to 2005, is October 31st 2010.

Moyo told VOA Studio 7 that he expects parastatal executives that have not
complied with the government directive to do so before the end of this
month.

"All those executives who will fail to stick to the deadline will face the
wrath of the law," said Moyo.


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Only two ambulances for Harare

http://www.thezimbabwean.co.uk

Written by Vusimuzi Bhebhe
Saturday, 23 October 2010 14:38

HARARE - The Harare City Council is operating with only two ambulances to
service the local authority's 50 health facilities, the United Nations
Children's Fund (UNICEF) revealed last week.

The UN agency said the shortage of ambulances was severely affecting the
delivery of healthcare services in the capital, with some sick people
waiting more than nine hours before an ambulance is available to transport
them to the hospital.

"In a city like Harare, with more than 50 primary health facilities, only
two ambulances are available to respond to emergencies," it said.

Harare City Council spokesman Leslie Gwindi was not available for comment
but the local authority's ambulance fleet has previously been grounded due
to a shortage of fuel and spares, paralysing the provision of emergency
services in the city.

The shortage has forced the poor to either hire private vehicles or use
public transport to ferry sick relatives to hospital.

This has led to many patients who could otherwise survive being exposed to
risk of death because of lack of access to emergency care from trained
ambulance medics.

The shortage of ambulances ironically comes at a time the city fathers are
said to be splashing millions of dollars on top-of-the-range vehicles.


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Teachers Forced To Join Zanu(PF)

http://news.radiovop.com

23/10/2010 21:30:00

MASVINGO,October 23,2010- Progressive Teachers Union of Zimbabwe (PTUZ) has
claimed that liberation war veterans here are forcing its members to join
ZANU(PF) and to attend party meetings during working hours.

Takavafira Zhou of the militant union said he was shocked to learn that
hundreds of teachers in Masvingo and Midlands provinces were being forced to
pay USD25 or buy goats as punishment for late confirmation of their
membership to the former ruling party.
"We have learnt with shock that our members are being victimised by Zanu(PF)
thugs for not joining the party. We have overwhelming evidence to prove the
allegations, said Zhou.
Those found without party membership cards are severely punished and some
forced to buy goats which are usually taken by the party heavyweights.
Schools in Bikita and Zaka districts in Masvingo are the most affected as
war veterans leader and Zanu(PF) foot soldier Jabulani Sibanda together with
Chief Nhema are forcing teachers to abandon lectures and
attend political ralies.
"It's a shame that in some areas such as Zaka and Bikita, teachers are
forced to leave schools to attend political rallies. Already their salaries
are not enough and they are fined if they are found without party cards,
Zhou told Radio VOP.
RadioVOP was informed that teachers at Cheziya High School and Gombo Primary
in Gokwe and Mabika areas in Mberengwa and some in Masvingo were affected.
Zhou promised to take the matter to the responsible ministers in government.
Meanwhile MDC supporters in Masvingo continue to live in fear as the
campaign of intimidation by war veterans leader Sibanda rages on.Sibanda, a
former Zipra cadre believed to be in Emmerson Munangagwa,s camp has been
accussed of spearheading a campaign of terror aimed at instilling fear among
villagers there.
He is reportedly working with chiefs in the province.Police have turned a
blind eye to his activities as Sibanda is believed to have the backing of
party heavyweights and the Big Man himself.
ZANU(PF) Masvingo provincial chairman Lovemore Matuke denied that teachers
in the province were forced to join the party.He said they were joining
'willingly'.
However when contacted for comment Provincial Education Director (PED) Ms
Clara Dube said she needed more time to investigate the issue.
 


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Injiva Create Chaos At Bulawayo Passport Office

http://news.radiovop.com

23/10/2010 21:28:00

BULAWAYO,October 23,2010 -The decision by the South African government to
give Zimbabwean immigrants the deadline of December 31 to regularise their
stay in the country has created chaos and confusion at the Bulawayo passport
office.

Staff at the Registrar-General,s office say they are now struggling to cope
with the large numbers of people applying for passports.The South African
government ultimatum coincided with Zimbabwe,s own decision to slash
passport fees from  USD140 to USD50.
After the announcement by Home Affairs Department in South Africa, thousands
of Zimbabweans who had been working and living in that country illegally
returned home to apply for travel documents.
A Radio Vop reporter who visited the passport office found hundreds of
people sleeping outside the premises waiting to be the first in the queue
when the offices opened for business.
Some people in the queues said they were asked to pay small bribes to be
given application forms.
" When I went to collect the forms I was told to come back after one month
but if you pay a bribe, you get the forms in few minutes, said Hellen Moyo
one of the people who slept in the queue.
Moyo said after spending five days visiting the offices, she was told to
collect her forms on Novemeber 3.Some of the residents told  Radio Vop that
they now resorted to travelling to Gwanda where they said the staff there
were more efficient than those in Bulawayo.
Although Radio Vop was not able to get official comment from the
Registrar-General,s office, some staff members admitted the chaos at the
passport office has been created by the influx of Zimbabweans who work in
South Africa affectionately known in Matabeleland as Injiva.

Meanwhile Home Affairs Department in South Africa says it has so far
processed 24000 applications for permits from the Zimbabwean immigrants.Out
of that number 6000 permits have been issued while 247 applications were
rejected because it was discovered that they were accompanied by fraudulent
letters of employment.
After December 31, Zimbabweans in South Africa who will be found without
permits will be deported.


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Gutu Villagers Tell Mugabe They Are Starving

http://news.radiovop.com

23/10/2010 21:26:00

GUTU,October 22,2010-Thousands of starving families in Gutu District in
drought stricken Masvingo province have appealed to President Robert Mugabe
for food handouts following poor rains that left farmers with nothing to
harvest.

Mugabe was at Matizha Primary school for the installation of his
cousin,Vengesai Rushwaya, as Chief Serima on Thursday.
The daring villagers told Mugabe in the face that they were on the brink of
starvation and desperately needed his intervention.
One of the villagers, a school development committee member who was asked to
introduce other members, took the opportunity to air their grievances.
"Mr President, we are almost dying. We had poor harvests due to drought. We
need your urgent help or else we will starve," said the villager.
Another villager who was asked to shout party slogans made the same appeal
to the President.
Masvingo provincial governor and Resident Minister Titus Maluleke also
siezed the opportunity and told the President that thousands of villagers
were facing food shortages in the district and needed urgent supplies.
"We had poor rains last year and many people hardly harvested
anything. About 1 000 people in the province are in need of food handouts.
The most affected are Gutu, Zaka and Chivi districts,'Maluleke said.
Responding to the appeal for food, Mugabe said his government will introduce
food for work schemes where villagers will get money to buy food.
 


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Commonwealth throws Zim lifeline

http://www.financialgazette.co.zw/

Friday, 22 October 2010 11:47

Nelson Chenga, Staff Reporter

THE Commonwealth is quietly working on a multi-million dollar aid package to
assist Zimbabwe emerge from a decade-long socio-economic bog as the
54-member bloc moves to re-engage Harare, which renounced its membership
about seven years ago. The Financial Gazette can exclusively reveal that the
Commo-nwealth has been hard at work on what it terms a "Special Programme
for Zimbabwe" since mid last year despite President Robert Mugabe severing
ties with the former British Empire after threats to suspend the country
over alleged gross human rights violations and flawed elections between 2000
and 2002.
The programme is a brainchild of a civil society-led Common-wealth
organisations' roundtable meeting that took place in South Africa in early
July last year and will target, among other sectors, education and health,
confirming years of behind the scenes efforts by successive Commonwealth
secretary generals to re-engage Zi-mbabwe.
Commonwealth director of communications and public affairs, Eduardo del
Buey, told The Financial Gazette this week that as a former member country,
Zim-babwe and its people remained important to the grouping.
"Plans are being finalised to launch a Special Programme for Zimbabwe,
offering technical assistance in a number of areas, including education,
health and capacity building for key institutions," said del Buey.
The education and health sectors, for instance, are desperate for assistance
after suffering the worst during the past decade of economic and political
upheaval.
"As a former member country, Zimbabwe and its citizens remain very much in
the Commonwealth's thoughts and indeed, since the withdrawal, the
secretary-general has consistently engaged with Commonwealth leaders,
especially within SADC (the Southern African Development Community), on the
situation in Zimbabwe.
"Zimbabwe has a special place in the history of the modern Commonwealth and,
as our Heads of Government have said, we hope the conditions can be created
for Zimbabwe to return to the Commonwealth family."
Despite Zimbabwe having voluntarily withdrawn from the association the
Commonwealth still maintains that for the country to be readmitted it should
"accept and comply with Commonwealth fundamental values, principles, and
priorities and specifically to demonstrate commitment to: democracy and
democratic processes, including free and fair elections and representative
legislatures; the rule of law and independence of the judiciary; good
governance, including a well-trained public service and transparent public
accounts; and protection of human rights, freedom of expression, and
equality of opportunity".
Discord in the inclusive government has so far shredded most of these
conditions prompting Move-ment for Democratic Change leader, Prime Minister
Morgan Tsvangirai, to openly vent his frustrations over the unilateralism by
one the partners in the unity government, ZANU-PF, through letters to the
United Nations, the European Union and SADC mediator, South African
President Jacob Zuma, among others.
The soured relations between the Commonwealth and Zim-babwe still run deep.
This was evidenced by the conspicuous absence of Zimbabwean athletes at the
recent Commonwealth Games held in Delhi, India.
The games, held every four years, are not specifically targeted for
Commonwealth countries only but invite athletes from all over the world and
this year the event attracted athletes from 71 countries.
 When he pulled Zimbabwe out of the grouping in December 2003 President
Mugabe equated the club to the famous English writer George Owen's novel
Animal Farm, accusing some of the group members of being "more equal than
others". If the choice were made, one for us to lose our sovereignty and
become a member of the Commonwealth or remain with our sovereignty and lose
the membership of the Commonwealth, I would say let the Commonwealth go,"
said President Mugabe then.
 The Commonwealth is a voluntary association of large and small as well as
rich and poor countries that seek to support each other and work together
towards common goals of democracy and development. The group emerged in the
1870s and was reconstituted in 1949.


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Dabengwa faces coup

http://www.financialgazette.co.zw/

Friday, 22 October 2010 11:52

Clemence Manyukwe, Political Editor

DUMISO Dabengwa is facing a revolt in the revived ZAPU as a rival faction
pushes for the son of the late nationalist, Joshua Nkomo, Sibangilizwe to
take over the leadership of the new opposition. The emergence of
Siban-gilizwe is threatening to split ZAPU right through the middle and
weaken its prospects of eclipsing ZANU-PF and the Movement for Democratic
Change formations at the next polls.
The Financial Gazette has it on good authority that moves are underway to
persuade the late national hero's son to take-over the leadership of ZAPU
before the general elections, in shenanigans that may result in a vote of no
confidence in the former ZIPRA intelligence supremo.
Those pushing for Siba-ngilizwe would want ZAPU to ride on the back of the
popularity of his father, the late Father Zimbabwe.
ZAPU's spokesperson, Methuseli Moyo, yesterday admitted knowing of attempts
to thrust Sibangilizwe into the leadership position of the party. He said
the opposition party did not wish to establish a monarch, but stressed that
this position was not an attack on Sibangilizwe.
"There are some people who think that ZAPU is a party of their inheritance,
but they are mistaken. ZAPU belongs to all Zimbabweans and it is wrong for
someone to imagine that someone should be the leader simply because of their
father. The official party position is that we held a successful congress
where we elected our leadership and the next congress will come after five
years. There is no leadership election at the moment," said Moyo.
He dismissed the moves as machinations by people who  lost in their bid to
get leadership positions in the party.
"ZAPU does not belong to any particular family or individual. We do not want
to establish a monarch at ZAPU. We are running a political party and not a
dynasty. I am not attacking Sibangilizwe, but those who are trying to use
him to achieve their dubious political dreams."
The latest maneuvers comes months after Dabengwa survived another storm,
amid allegations by some of the party's members that he displayed autocratic
tendencies and fears that he wanted to turn the opposition party into a
replica of ZANU-PF.
The same allegations are being raised now, along with claims that the late
Nkomo's son has what it takes for the party to gain a strong foothold in
Zimbabwean politics.
In an interview yesterday, Sibangilizwe denied knowledge of a plan to hand
him the leadership of ZAPU saying no one had aproached him yet with that
proposal.
He however added that he was willing to contribute towards pulling Zimbabwe
out of the current crisis.
"No one has approached me with that, but I am willing to help the people of
this country to get out of this current mess. I am not talking about
political parties, I am talking about helping the people to get out of
this mess."
ZAPU revivalists pulled out of the unity accord the late Nkomo reached with
ZANU-PF in 1987, accusing ZANU-PF of failing to fully implement the
agreement by among other things,sidelining them in the appointment of senior
officials.
At a congress held in August at the Zimbabwe International Trade Fair,
Dabengwa was  unanimously elected as the revived party's leader.
Dabengwa officially left ZANU-PF before the 2008 polls to join former
cabinet minister, Simba Makoni's presidential bid.


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Mugabe offer disowned

http://www.brisbanetimes.com.au

Nick McKenzie and Richard Baker
October 23, 2010

MONASH University has distanced itself from an invitation issued by one of
its senior representatives to notorious Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe,
asking him to give a guest lecture at one of its campuses.

The invitation was issued in July by the deputy pro-vice-chancellor of the
university's South African campus, Dina Burger, when she and two other
senior Monash staff met Mr Mugabe in his presidential office in the
Zimbabwean capital Harare.

The meeting appears to have been part of a marketing exercise to encourage
Zimbabwean students to attend the Monash South Africa campus and to thank Mr
Mugabe's regime for paying for several student scholarships as part of his
''presidential scholarship program''.
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After the meeting between the Monash delegation and Mr Mugabe, the
state-owned Zimbabwean Broadcasting Corporation reported that Professor
Burger had ''commended Commander Mugabe's humility''.

''Our visit to Zimbabwe was to demonstrate our commitment to the
presidential scholarship program by coming to your beautiful country,''
Professor Burger reportedly said.

"We invited the President to come to our university to give a public
lecture, which he gladly accepted and would visit in the near future.''

An official appointed by Mr Mugabe to run his scholarship fund, Commander
Christopher Mushohwe, said after the meeting: "The program is going to
fulfil the Head of State and Government and Commander-in-Chief of the
Zimbabwe Defence Forces President Robert Mugabe's dream of according
deserving students an opportunity to further their studies a reality."

Asked about the appropriateness of Professor Burger's remarks, a spokeswoman
for Monash University told The Age that the comments had not been approved
and that ''no visits by President Mugabe to Monash . are planned''.

''The comments made by Professor Dina Burger in verbally inviting the
President to visit Monash South Africa and meet students sponsored by the
Zimbabwe government were not endorsed by Monash University and was not an
official invitation to visit the campus,'' the spokeswoman said.

She said that Monash University believed educating students sponsored by Mr
Mugabe would help contribute ''to a better Zimbabwe''.

The scholarship program was set up ostensibly to support poor students but
it has been accused of favouring supporters of the Mugabe regime.

In September 2002 Australia implemented a sanctions regime targeting
Zimbabwe, which included downgrading government and cultural links and
restricting travel to Australia by some Mugabe regime officials.

After coming to power in 1980, Mr Mugabe began replacing his professed
commitment to freedom and democracy with an increasingly oppressive, corrupt
and authoritarian system of governance.

Mr Mugabe visited Australia in 1981 to attend the Commonwealth Heads of
Government Meeting. He was still well regarded around the world at that
time.

Deakin University senior lecturer in international relations Scott Burchill
said the reported comments made during the Monash delegation's trip to
Zimbabwe were an anathema to the values and ethics that should be promoted
by Australian universities.

''These ethics are put at risk, however, if a university is seen to endorse
an odious and tyrannical regime, such as Robert Mugabe's in Zimbabwe, simply
for the purposes of recruiting students from that country,'' Dr Burchill
said.

''Universities should remain at a professional length from partisan
politics, and instead restate their support for the foundations of all
liberal democracies. Regimes like Mugabe's radically violate these values.
They should not be given a public platform by an Australian university to
trash them further.''

Professor Burger did not respond to questions from The Age.


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ZANU-PF Scholarships for the privileged



Robert Mugabe’s scheme to educate and enrich the children of his cabinet
members and supporters has been going on for years now. When Mugabe’s Fort
Hare scholarship scheme was created, its purpose was said, to be for
uplifting orphans and the poor, but like anything ZANU PF, it never worked
as such. Today, dozens of children of living ZANU-PF sympathisers are the
main beneficiaries of Mugabe’s scholarship scheme. This is of course not a
surprise as Mugabe and his comrades believe in empowering the few around
them and suppressing the masses. It is the children of Mugabe’s third
chimurenga farm owners and so-called indigenous businessman who are paraded
on TV every year as the “less fortunate who have excelled in education and
have been graciously chosen by the president to go and study abroad”. The
scheme which also includes other South African universities such as
Johannesburg and some universities in China and Malaysia is a total fraud.
Most of the beneficiaries are poor performers whose parents pay ZIMSEC for
them to be awarded pass grades. Some are sons and daughters, cousins and
nephews of army generals and their lieutenants who do not want to send their
children to the local institutions and do not want to part with their US
dollars for fees for their children’s foreign education. The money used to
fund these individuals, which Mugabe claims is his, comes from the tax
payers.

Only a fraction, if ever, of the scholarship’s recipients are genuine
orphans with genuine achievements. Otherwise, almost all of the individuals
selected for Mugabe’s “Orphans and less privileged” scholarship have both
living parents and at least one is either an army police, prison, C.I.O.
officer or attached to ZANU-PF in one way or another. Children and families
of late liberation war heroes get kicked out of homes and their children
forsaken but those of living conmen are well catered for. Genuine
scholarships such as the Econet Joshua Nkomo scholarship are the only ones
which cater for underprivileged people.

A source who works in the office of the president has a list of current and
the next batch of students and the names of their living mothers and fathers
where relevant will soon appear on the internet. Its a shame that this is
happening while MDC comfortably shares power with Mugabe. No wonder why the
county always ends up with leaders like Henrietta Rushwaya and the likes of
Leo Mugabe who cheat the system on the way up and continue to cheat the
system as leaders. The poor will never rise, but the children of the
oppressors will always be put through into the leadership positions, over
and over again.

Yours

Tafadzwa Magata


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We have not forgotten


Dear Family and Friends,
Both Mr Mugabe and Mr Tsvangirai are openly talking about elections
being held in 2011. Just the word “elections” reminds us of the
hell of 2008: a time and place we never want to go back to.

In January 2008 we were all going across our borders to buy basic
supplies because our own shops were empty thanks to government price
controls which had resulted in all production coming to a halt. My own
shopping list on a trip to South Africa had dozens of items on it and
included flour, rice, beans, tinned goods, sugar, salt, margarine,
cooking oil, tea, milk powder and even toilet paper.

In February 2008 the monthly salary of civil servants and people in
general employment was only enough to purchase one single loaf of
bread and a two litre bottle of cooking oil. In March a loaf of bread
cost 7 million dollars and a dozen eggs were 30 million dollars. In
reality these prices were actually in the billions but Reserve Bank
Governor Gideon Gono removed zeros from the currency just before the
elections. On the 29th March Zimbabwe voted. After casting his ballot
Mr Mugabe said: “The moment the people stop supporting you, then
that’s the moment you should quit politics.”

Throughout April 2008 the election results were not announced and a
tsunami of violence swamped the country. Newspaper headlines screamed:
“Murder, torture, terror” and “Hundreds flee Zanu PF.”

In May 2008, 5 weeks after the poll, election results were finally
announced. The MDC had won the majority of seats in parliament and Mr
Tsvangirai had more votes than Mr Mugabe in the Presidential vote. It
was announced that the Presidential majority wasn’t large enough and
another poll was to be held. Violence swept across the land and
multiple thousands of people were killed, maimed and tortured for
“voting the wrong way.” A loaf of bread soared in price to 40
million dollars.

A run off Presidential ballot was held in June 2008; Mr Mugabe was the
only candidate as Mr Tsvangira pulled out because of widespread
violence. One man at my local hospital arrived with two broken arms, a
broken leg and a fractured skull; he was accused of having supported
the MDC. On the 29th June 2008 Mr Mugabe was again declared the
President of Zimbabwe.

In July 2008 hundreds of people arrived at foreign embassies in Harare
begging for sanctuary and humanitarian assistance. The MDC said that
at least a quarter of a million people had been displaced from their
homes by violence. The Reserve Bank Governor set a maximum daily
withdrawal limit from banks of 100 billion dollars. At that time a
five day penicillin-based antibiotic cost 2 trillion dollars. There
was no bread to buy and a single scone cost 140 billion dollars. 5000
people a day were arriving every day at a Home Affairs refugee
reception centre in South Africa.

In August 2008, five months after the elections, Zimbabwe was still in
limbo with no parliament and no MP’s having been sworn in. In
September Zimbabwe began hearing about power sharing where losers
became winners and vice versa.

October 2008 saw inflation at 231 million percent and there were only
cabbages and condoms to buy in major supermarkets. There was no seed
maize or fertilizer to buy as the rainy season began and in November
2008 hospitals didn’t even have disposable gloves let alone
medicines, drips or bandages.

Two years later we don’t have democracy, but thanks to an MDC
Finance Minister who put the brakes on, we do have imported food in
the shops, US dollars in our purses and inflation under 10%. Zimbabwe
has not forgotten the hell of 2008, who took us there and who brought
us back. Until next time, thanks for reading, love cathy Copyright �
Cathy Buckle. 23 October 2010.
www.cathybuckle.com


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A letter from the diaspora



Friday October 22nd 2010
A prison memoir titled 'Conversations with Myself' was released this week.
It's a selection of  diary entries from the world's most famous prisoner,
Nelson Mandela, written while he was imprisoned on Robben Island together
with Ahmed Kathrada, the late Walter Sisulu and other heroes of the anti
apartheid struggle. Speaking on the BBC last Saturday, Ahmed Kathrada
repeated some words of Mandela's that have a poignant relevance for
Zimbabwe. "Don't bear grudges" the great man said, "that was the past."
But in Zimbabwe, from the head of state right down to the thugs at grass
roots of Zanu PF, the past is all they have to offer. Addressing the
National Youth Assembly this week Robert Mugabe asked, "Tsvangirai, tell us
where were you when Zanu PF was fighting for the liberation of this country.
So who are you to tell me to go? Who are you to say I should go?" Mugabe
hardly needs reminding that Morgan Tsvangirai is the head of the party that
defeated Zanu PF in the elections. He knows that very well, hence his
decision to rush ahead with elections in 2011. At 86 years old, he must know
he hasn't got that much longer - even if the Women's League endorse him as
President for Life. In a rather lame reminder, Mugabe told the Youth
Assembly to eschew violence but clearly Jabulani Sibanda, for one, wasn't
listening to the Dear Leader's words. Continuing his rampage of violence and
intimidation in Zaka the so-called war veteran told villagers that he had
been "sent to warn all sellouts in the area that ZPF is ready to kill them
if they fail to join his party before campaigning for the next elections
have begun.".
All the evidence on the ground points to the fact that campaigning has
already begun; Zanu PF is in full election mode supported, as always, by the
military and the police. Troops are deployed in Mutoko and many other rural
areas around the country; the police are banning MDC political meetings on
the grounds that insufficient notice has been given and Augustine Chihuri
transfers the entire Avondale force to remote rural areas for no other
reason one can see than that  Morgan Tsvangirai's home is in the Avondale
area and Chihuri suspects the police based there of being MDC supporters.
The UZ is sealed off by riot police and students are savagely beaten by the
police, just to teach them a lesson I suspect, because no charges are laid
against them. A man in Kezi is imprisoned for three months for daring to say
that he hates Mugabe; journalists in Mutare are beaten on their feet by a
policeman who tells them, "You will learn that as the policeman I am king"
Farm seizures increase as the country heads for elections. It is common
knowledge that Mugabe wants all white farmers off the land before the
country goes to the polls. A JAG report from a farm in Chegutu tells how a
group of men arrived at a woman's farm and told her she had three hours to
get out. "I told him I was 5th generation Zimbabwean. This was irrelevant I
was told. He held out his arm and said 'This is black and even if you were
born in Kadoma (which I was) you are white and have no place here.' The
woman told him she had a court order allowing her to remain on her farm and
he replied, "There is no law for whites in Zimbabwe, we are the law."
If this is the situation in late October 2010, one can only dread what 2011
is going to be like. Amnesty reports some 1.120 case of human rights abuse
in August alone and while the UK and Europe are absorbed in their economic
troubles, it is not likely that Zimbabwe's troubles will feature largely on
the international radar. Former South African President Mbeki has just told
journalists that the GPA is the only game in town for Zimbabwe but Robert
Mugabe is intent on ditching the arrangement as soon as possible by whatever
means he can - not excluding violence and electoral chicanery.  Living in
the past he certainly is but it is the present and future generations of
Zimbabweans who will pay for his failure to accept the reality that his time
is up.
Yours in the (continuing) struggle PH. aka Pauline Henson.
 

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