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Mugabe opponent says Zimbabwe is on verge of change

http://news.yahoo.com/

AFP

– Thu Nov 18, 3:44 pm ET

JOHANNESBURG (AFP) – Roy Bennett, a Zimbabwean politician who has come under
repeated attack from President Robert Mugabe, said Thursday the long-time
leader's rule is coming to an end.

Bennett, whose stalled appointment as deputy agriculture minister has
threatened to grind the country's power-sharing government to a halt, told
an audience in Johannesburg that he is confident Zimbabwe's next elections
will be peaceful and remove the 86-year-old Mugabe's ZANU-PF from power.

"For ZANU-PF to use violence in the next election is going to be nigh
impossible," Bennett said.

"I disagree (that) they can steal the next election," he said. "It is us
that control the process. We the people of Zimbabwe. And no one is going to
force their will on us."

Zimbabweans "have chosen the peaceful way in seeing out a dictatorship", he
said.

Bennett, a top aide to Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai, has been one of the
major stumbling blocks for Tsvangirai's uneasy partnership with Mugabe in a
compromise government formed after violent and inconclusive elections in
2008.

The power-sharing deal was meant to steer the country toward a new
constitution and fresh elections, but the constitution-making process has
been marred by renewed violence and a date for elections has not been set.

Mugabe, Zimbabwe's ruler since independence in 1980, has refused to allow
Bennett, a 53-year-old white farmer, to take up his appointment as
Tsvangirai's pick for deputy agriculture minister in the unity government.

Bennett was arrested just an hour before Mugabe swore in the compromise
cabinet in February 2009. He was charged with terrorism for allegedly
plotting to overthrow Mugabe.

Bennett was acquitted in May, but prosecutors are appealing the decision.

Speaking at Johannesburg's University of the Witwatersrand in a public
conversation with Peter Godwin, the author of a new book critical of Mugabe,
Bennett said the Zimbabwean president fears him because he is a white man
who appeals to black voters.

Bennett, a fluent speaker of the majority Shona language, is popular with
his constituents, who have nicknamed him "Pachedu", meaning "We are one".

"Everything that I stand for Robert Mugabe abhors," Bennett said Thursday.

"I have a very strong constituency. I'm a farmer. I happen to be white. I
happen to be a third-generation Zimbabwean. It flaunts all the conceptions
that he's been trying to put out that someone like me would have a
constituency and a following from the Zimbabwean people spontaneously."

Bennett said he has been in exile in South Africa since he learned in
September that police were looking to re-arrest him, the second time in four
years he has fled across the border to avoid arrest.

"I don't feel I'd serve...the interest of my constituency sitting in prison
in Zimbabwe," he said.


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GPA principals in Botswana for Troika meeting

http://www.swradioafrica.com

By Tichaona Sibanda
19 November 2010

The three principals to the Global Political Agreement are in Gaborone,
Botswana for the SADC Troika meeting on Zimbabwe. The meeting began Friday
afternoon and is expected to finish late in the evening.

The Troika, chaired by Zambian President Rupiah Banda, will examine the
latest crisis in Harare over the unilateral senior appointments by Robert
Mugabe. Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai is seeking guarantees from the
meeting that SADC will establish a roadmap to ensure free and fair elections
in the country, set for 2011.

The meeting at Gaborone’s Grand Palm hotel is expected to be a highly
charged Indaba as it comes at a time when Tsvangirai has lost his patience
and recently labelled Mugabe ‘a crook.’

Mugabe unilaterally appointed governors, judges and ambassadors without
consulting the MDC leader and has also refused to implement outstanding
issues in the GPA, a situation that has culminated in the two protagonists
not seeing eye to eye in the past month.

After Friday’s Troika meeting President Banda is expected to brief other
leaders on the outcome and recommendations on Zimbabwe, when he presents his
first report an extra-ordinary summit on Saturday.

A senior figure in the MDC-T told us Thursday that Tsvangirai is to insist
on a clear roadmap for a free and fair election, with concrete measures to
eliminate intimidation and violence, if a poll is to go ahead next year.

He is also expected to insist on the full implementation of the already
agreed matters in the Global Political Agreement. Some SADC leaders are
pushing for the immediate deployment of a SADC team to oversee the reform
and electoral process. But some observers remain concerned that other
leaders in SADC are firmly on Mugabe's side and are not impartial enough to
help run free elections in Zimbabwe.


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KP tightens screws on Marange gems

http://www.zimonline.co.za

by Own Correspondent     Friday 19 November 2010

HARARE – The Kimberley Process (KP) has placed its members on high alert
amid allegations that Zimbabwe has exported a US$160-million parcel of
diamonds from Marange to India in violation of an embargo on trade in gems
from the controversial fields.

KP chairperson Boaz Hirsch said KP participants must exercise vigilance and
immediately report to the body’s Working Group on Monitoring (WGM) any
shipments suspected to contain diamonds illegally exported from the Marange
fields.

He said no trade in Marange diamonds can currently take place until Zimbabwe
meets the conditions of a Joint Work Plan (JWP) agreed by both parties at a
plenary meeting held in Namibia last November.

Under the JWP Zimbabwe committed to a phased withdrawal of the armed forces
from the diamond fields and for a monitor to examine and certify that all
shipments of diamonds from Marange met KP standards.

“Participants are therefore reminded of the need for vigilance and ask
participant to notify the WGM chair in the event of receipt of an irregular
shipment of Marange diamonds, until new arrangements are agreed that will
allow continued implementation of the Joint Work Plan, including the
supervised export mechanism,” Hirsch said in a notice to KP members.

KP monitor Abbey Chikane allegedly cleared a batch of Chiadzwa stones for
export two weeks ago without seeking the watchdog’s approval.

Diamonds worth some US$160 million were sold and may have been already
exported to India.

The action by the South African monitor came despite the failure by KP
participants to agree on trade in Marange stone during a meeting in
Jerusalem earlier this month.

Zimbabwe was granted more time to fall in line with the minimum
international standards of diamond trade. But there are still ongoing
reports of brutal military control of the diamond fields and smuggling.

At a special meeting in Russia in July, KP members agreed to permit Zimbabwe
to export two shipments of diamonds under supervision of the body's
monitors, on condition that the body would investigate conditions in the
Marange fields.

The agreement also tied all future exports of diamonds to clear and
measurable progress in ending smuggling and abuses, and allowed for local
civil society groups to participate in monitoring progress in the fields.


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Fearful Bulawayo magistrate denies Standard journalist bail

http://www.swradioafrica.com

By Tichaona Sibanda
19 November 2010

A Bulawayo magistrate denied Standard journalist Nqobani Ndlovu bail on
Friday, because she is ‘afraid of getting into trouble’ if she released him
without properly checking the facts.

Ndlovu was brought to court to face charges of criminal defamation, after he
alleged that exams in the police were being scrapped to facilitate the
absorption of war vets and retired officers back into the force ahead of
next year’s elections. The scribe was arrested by the police in Bulawayo on
Wednesday.

Magistrate Sibongile Msipa who presided over case, ruled that she needed
‘more time’ to go through submissions from the defence and prosecution teams
before making a decision on the bail application. She remanded Ndlovu in
custody to Monday 22nd November.

Our Bulawayo correspondent Lionel Saungweme told us the magistrate shocked
the court when admitting she was not comfortable in granting Ndlovu his
freedom, because of the ‘sensitivity’ of the case.

Saungweme said; ‘She kept repeating the same words—I’m afraid I will get
into trouble—when Ndlovu’s lawyer pressed her to release his client. We can
only guess she takes instructions from her bosses otherwise judges and
magistrates should be independent people.’

The state opposed bail after making submissions that Ndlovu might abscond as
he was facing a very serious charge which attracted a prison term of 20
years.

However Josephat Tshuma, Ndlovu’s lawyer, rubbished the state assertion that
his client faced a prison term of 20 years. He told the magistrate a
criminal defamation conviction carries a penalty of up to two years’
imprisonment, or an option of a fine. Tshuma argued that any penalty that
attracted an option of a fine could not be considered too serious.


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Artist to go on solo demonstration against corruption

http://www.radiovop.com/

19/11/2010 15:11:00

HARARE - A Zimbabwean artist with interests in promoting human rights,
democracy and good governance will next Wednesday hold a one man
demonstration at the Parliament of Zimbabwe to demand that all public office
holders declare their assets as a way of abating corruption.

Silvanos Mudzvova an award winning and internationally acclaimed theatre
actor and director and producer with Vhitori Entertainment, told Radio VOP:

“I am motivated by the desire to ensure that public office holders are
accountable to their constituency. Just look at the Chombo case he has
stands in high density areas where the poor live and what that tells us is
that he is taking from the poor and the poor have to speak against this,”
said Mudzvova who will be following in the footsteps of James Maridadi who a
few years ago marched to parliament when he was still a radio presenter at
ZBC.
“We have been quite for too long and as long as we are quite these things
will continue,” he said.

Local Government Minister Ignatius Chombo is believed to own several housing
properties and cars listed in a report published by the Herald Newspaper
quoting High Court papers filed by his estranged wife Mariam with whom he is
engaged in a messy divorce affair. Chombo, has however, through his lawyers
disputed the published list of the properties.

Mudzvova said his demonstration will last for three hours and the police had
granted him the permission to stage the march.

He said the demonstration is aimed at Members of Parliament, the Attorney
General, Reserve of Zimbabwe (RBZ) Governor, civil servants, mayors and
councillors across the country whom he said should declare their assets
before taking office.

“It is my hope that after the demonstration Parliament will craft a law that
makes it mandatory for every public office holder to declare assets and fear
to abuse office by enriching themselves as is the case with Chombo. The
public office abuse has been going on since independence and in the end of
every office abuse we end up with a commission that doesn’t bring out any
result hence the need to call for a law that makes it criminal to abuse
public office,” said Mudzvova in a posting on his Face book page.


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AG dismisses lawyers call to prosecute political violence

http://www.swradioafrica.com

By Tererai Karimakwenda
19 November, 2010

Zimbabwe’s Attorney General, Johannes Tomana, is reported to have dismissed
a letter sent by human rights lawyers calling for the prosecution of
political violence perpetrators. Representing the survivors of attacks that
occurred in Muzarabani during the 2008 elections, the Zimbabwe Lawyers for
Human Rights (ZLHR) told SW Radio Africa that they had written to the
Attorney General, the police in Muzarabani and the Ministry of Home Affairs,
demanding that the cases be investigated.

Lawyer Rangu Nyamurundira said they had not received a response from any of
them. But the Zimonline news site reported on Thursday that the Attorney
General had dismissed the letter as ‘political and trivial’. The report
quoted Tomana as saying ‘he will not even bother looking at the dossier
because it was not compiled by the police’.

“If these so-called human rights defenders have genuine cases why do they
not work with the police and the cases are investigated. I can only work on
a docket brought to my office by police,” said Tomana.

Nyamurundira explained that the lawyers are acting on behalf of about 100
political violence victims from the rural area of Muzarabani district
,northeast of Harare. “What we had to do because there were so many, was
just pick the more serious cases and that’s why we have only 12 victims who
suffered various criminal offenses,” he added.

After Robert Mugabe lost the 2008 presidential election by a small margin,
ZANU PF thugs, war vets and youth militia embarked on a violent campaign
around the country. The MDC said ‘officially’ 20 people died, although it’s
known that more died much later, due to injuries received after many tens of
thousands were tortured. The idea was to ensure a Mugabe victory in the
presidential runoff. But Tsvangirai withdrew from that race because of the
violence and Mugabe’s subsequent victory was denounced as a sham.

Nyamurundira said: “We have cases of alleged murder where lives were lost
during the presidential election. Some of our clients were tortured at
bases. Some people had their homes and property burned down and some
property taken from them by the alleged perpetrators.”

The ZLHR said they would now consult their clients and consider legal action
against the police, the Ministry of Home Affairs and the government’s chief
prosecutor, Attorney General Johannes Tomana.

The police have not investigated cases of political violence against the
MDC. And in fact it is the victims that have wound up behind bars after
reporting to the police. The lawyers fear that this culture of impunity will
encourage more acts of political violence if elections are held before this
situation is changed.


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Zimbabwe rakes in US$800m from mineral exports

http://www.africanmanager.com

Friday, 19 November 2010

PANA

Zimbabwe earned US$807 million from mineral exports in the first nine months
of the year, a government mining agency said Friday.

The Minerals Marketing Corporation of Zimbabwe said the earnings represented
an increase of 25 percent over the same period last year.

It said platinum, of which Zimbabwe has the second largest reserves in the
world after South Africa, accounted for the bulk of the earnings at US$540
million.

This was followed up by diamonds at over US$100 million, and smaller
earnings fr om nickle, coal and granite.

The government-run minerals marketing agency said the figure excluded
earnings f rom gold, which is marketed independently by the central bank.

But gold production has surged strongly this year, and export earnings were
proj ected around US$500 million for the full year.

Zimbabwe has a strong mining industry, but it has been thrown into
uncertainty a fter the authorities announced plans to seize controlling
shareholdings in all foreign-owned businesses, particularly mining
companies.


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'It pays to be Mugabe's ally'

http://www.mg.co.za

JASON MOYO | HARARE, ZIMBABWE - Nov 19 2010 13:22

Zimbabwe's Ignatius Chombo is an inspiration to government ministers and
public servants everywhere. His example to them is: on your measly
government salary, one day you too can divorce your wife and send her on her
way with a bus, a few dozen of Harare's best addresses, a Mercedes-Benz,
eight trucks, a block of flats, 10 or so companies and the odd farm.

A divorce hearing in Zimbabwe's High Court has caused Chombo, a Zimbabwean
local government minister, some embarrassment. One of President Robert
Mugabe's closest allies -- who hails from Mugabe's home district -- the
former college lecturer has been a fixture in Zimbabwean politics for about
15 years.

Mugabe has remained silent on what the divorce action is throwing up, but
Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai has compared Chombo to a greedy baboon
trying to grab every cob from a farmer's maize field.

Chombo denies he owns all the assets that his estranged wife, Marian, was
reported by the state daily Herald to be after. The paper listed nearly 100
properties, 15 cars, trucks, safari camps and 10 companies.

Through his lawyers, he claimed he "didn't own 90%" of the properties listed
by the Herald, which quoted court papers submitted by his wife.

As local government minister, Chombo oversees Zimbabwe's local councils,
notorious for corruption in the allocation of municipal land.

But he insists that his properties -- ranging from township hovels to
suburban apartments and a cluster of 30 stands in Harare's wealthy
Borrowdale and Glen Lorne areas -- have nothing to do with the many years he
has spent in charge of the portfolio.

Lawyers and admirers at Chombo's defence
Chombo's lawyers, indignant on behalf of their avowedly virtuous and
public-spirited client, have been breathing fire at the Herald. He knows
nothing about what his wife is on about, they insist. "It paints a picture
of a corrupt individual who amassed all the properties using his position
since he has been a government minister for the better part of his working
career."

In fact, some of it was owned by his twentysomething son, his lawyers said.
And some of the 15 vehicles -- among which the Herald reported were four
Land Cruisers and three Mercedes-Benz -— are listed as "parliament or
government vehicles," they said.

The Chombo scandal has provided a glimpse of how profitable it is to be a
Mugabe ally and why those who defend his rule do so with passion.

Some see the Chombo case as a test of how Mugabe will react to corruption
among his senior officials. But it's not as if the minister was defying the
ageing president by grabbing control of the land and the economy.

Chombo does have his supporters. This week, a writer signing himself
"Bigboy" told the Herald to leave Chombo alone. "While others were busy
selling their assets to buy foreign currency ... there are many who were
buying properties and creating real value for their families," he wrote.
Truly, an inspiration.


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Mounting friction between Mugabe, Tsvangirai threaten Zimbabwe's government

http://www.csmonitor.com/

Prime Minister Tsvangirai could pull out, leading to early elections that
would favor President Mugabe, whose far-reaching powers haven't yet been
curbed by promised constitutional reform.

By A Correspondent / November 19, 2010
Harare, Zimbabwe

With friction between Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe and his chief rival,
Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai, mounting this week, the country's always
shaky coalition government appears to be edging towards collapse.

Zimbabwe’s coalition was formed nine months after deeply flawed elections in
March 2008 and has spent much of the past two years bickering over
government appointments and the collapsed economy. It has also failed to
write a new constitution, one of the coalition’s main tasks.

Now it looks as if Prime Minister Tsvangirai could pull out of the
coalition, which would probably lead Zimbabwe to early elections. Speaking
to party supporters at a rally in Bulawayo this week, Tsvangirai said he
could no longer see eye-to-eye with Mugabe, whom he described as a “crook”
for failing to honor his promises under the terms of the coalition
agreement.

If the coalition does collapse, analysts say that would suit Mr. Mugabe
perfectly, and some say he's trying to goad Tsvangirai into that deciscion.
Why? Because the vote will come before the constitutional reform that was
promised when the current government was formed, leaving Tsvangirai and his
allies at a severe disadvantage to Mugabe, who has ruled Zimbabwe with an
increasingly tight grip since 1980.

The current constitution gives the president far-reaching powers to appoint
judges, arrest opposition members, and order mass crackdowns by Zimbabwe’s
many security agencies. Mugabe has already declared that elections will be
held next year with or without a new constitution.

“The political climate is not conducive at all” for free and fair elections,
says Judy Smith-Hohn, a senior researcher at the Institute for Security
Studies in Pretoria, South Africa. “Draconian laws such as AIPPA and POSA
still exist, and the election will be definitely flawed,” she adds,
referring to the Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA)
and Public Order and Security Act (POSA), which deny members of the public
to gather for rallies without police clearance.

Tsvangirai joined Mugabe’s government in January 2009 in the hopes of ending
1 million percent inflation rates and the collapse of Zimbabwe's commercial
farming industry.
If Tsvangirai pulls out, new elections would be held immediately

Supporters of Tsvangirai’s opposition party, the Movement for Democratic
Change, say that Mugabe has stoked the fires between coalition partners by
unilaterally appointing provincial governors, judges, ambassadors, and other
senior public officers without consulting either Tsvangirai or his deputy
Arthur Mutambara, who leads a breakaway faction of the MDC.

“Mugabe wants elections under the current constitution as it favors him
because he can still use his presidential powers as he did in 2008,” says
John Makumbe, a critic of Mugabe, and a political science lecturer at
University of Zimbabwe in Harare. “They are saying it is better [to work
with] the devil you know than not.”

Under the current political arrangement, if one party pulls out of
government, elections are supposed to be held immediately, Mr. Makumbe says.
With Mugabe in control of the security forces, militias of so-called war
veterans loyal to him, and sweeping constitutional powers, he will be able
to control much of the election's outcome.

In 2008, police were allowed in polling stations – a move protested by civil
organizations, saying it frightened potential voters. Police forces were
also accused of detaining, beating, and in some cases killing opposition
activists.
Mugabe's party also seeks early elections

Mugabe's ruling Zanu PF party wants early elections as much as the president
himself. Party leaders are worried about Mugabe’s deteriorating health and
want to ensure elections are held before Mugabe dies as he is seen as the
only member of Zanu PF who can match Tsvangirai's popularity.

“Zanu PF wants elections now when Mugabe is still fit because they can’t
think of anyone who can stand shoulder to shoulder with Tsvangirai,” says
Mr. Makumbe. “This is compounded by the fact that the party is so divided at
the moment.”

Rumors of an affair between the president's wife, Grace Mugabe, and central
bank governor Gideon Gono could also take toll on Mugabe, some commentators
say. “In African tradition, it is very embarrassing to be told that another
man is sleeping with your wife,” says one analyst who requested anonymity.
“People will start to question your manhood.”

But Makumbe thinks otherwise. “He could have been angry about that story but
it won’t affect him too much. It is discredited because it had so many
holes,” he says.
Preparation for elections?

Mugabe has recently dispatched soldiers to rural areas to do what looks like
political ground work ahead of elections. Last week, they prevented the MDC
from holding rallies in Masvingo and Manicaland province.

The police have also tried to block Tsvangirai’s meetings with supporters,
while Mugabe can freely address his anytime and anywhere he chooses. This
scenario is reminiscent of the violent 2008 elections, in which the MDC
claims that more than 200 of its supporters were murdered by state security
agents as they aided Mugabe at the polls.

Another analyst says both Mugabe and Tsvangirai are using their positions to
prepare for what look like inevitable elections rather than focusing on the
national good.

Political analyst Takura Zhangazha said the political tension between Mugabe
and Tsvangirai was detrimental to the smooth working of the already shaky
inclusive government.

“On one hand Mugabe is more concerned about his divided party which is
bracing not only for a tough election next year but organizing its national
congress next month,” said Zhangazha. “On the other, Tsvangirai is holding
national consultative meetings with his supporters across the country to
prepare for the do-or-die elections.”

Even Zapu, a political party led by former Zanu PF politburo member Dumiso
Dabengwa, is also preparing for elections and making inroads. Some analysts
say Zapu could be a major force and take a bite out of Tsvangirai’s support.

But Zhangazha believes Zapu, which is largely viewed as a regional political
party, will not make much impact on the national political scene.

Apart from fighting it out with Tsvangirai, it will also battle it out with
the smaller MDC faction Mutambara, which draws most of its support from the
Matabeleland region.

“Zapu will not threaten MDC-T space in Matabeleland and it will not be as
successful as it anticipates because it will be also fighting against both
MDC factions,” said Zhangazha. “It is (Zapu) only going to further split the
vote in that region.”

Makumbe concurs: “Zapu will be very fortunate if it wins two seats. It
[Zapu] is just sentimental. It does not have any support.”
Unlikely handover of power

Even if elections are held and Mugabe loses, analysts say, it's unlikely
that Mugabe will allow a new president to replace him.

The octogenarian leader still enjoys the support of the security forces, who
have vowed that Tsvangirai will not rule this country as he is “a puppet of
the West.”

Mugabe appears to believe that with the discovery of diamonds in the country
that he can now survive sanctions imposed on him and his allies by selling
the gems In Asia. Though the Kimberley Process – the diamond industry's
internal watchdog on so-called "blood diamonds" – gave Zimbabwe a clean bill
of health in August, some major Western diamond networks have refused to buy
the country's stones.

“Prior to the unity government last year the Zanu (PF) regime was totally
broke, but having formed a coalition government with MDC, ZANU (PF) boasts
of more money than before,” says Sisonke Msimang, executive director for
Open Society Initiative for Southern Africa. “MDC will not win next year’s
elections basing on the resources that are in Zanu (PF)’s disposal.”

In 2008, Mugabe decisively lost the first round of the presidential poll to
Tsvangirai. But after that, Mugabe added security forces to the streets and
declared that Tsvangirai had fallen just short of the required 50 percent of
the vote to avoid a runoff. Tsvangirai refused to participate in the run-off
citing the likleihood of violence.

“If elections are held next year, we will witness another blood bath,
another disputed result, and Mugabe will remain on the helm," says Makumbe.

(The identity of the reporter for this story was withheld due to security
concerns; Savious Kwinika also contributed to this report from
Johannesburg.)


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Death threats and a deplorable school system

http://www.tes.co.uk

News | Published in The TES on 19 November, 2010 | By: Ian Evans

Zimbabwe: Fighting for better education has proved dangerous for a
teacher-turned-Movement for Democratic Change MP

A teacher's day in the UK is rarely a life or death affair. While a minority
are threatened by violence, they can at least call upon their union or the
authorities.

This isn't the case for Harrison Mudzuri, one-time English teacher and union
rep, who for the past two years has been an opposition Movement for
Democratic Change (MDC) MP in crisis-hit Zimbabwe.

He has lost count of the number of times he has been threatened with death
for opposing president Robert Mugabe and fighting for better education in a
country which has teetered on the edge of economic collapse since
controversial farm invasions began 10 years ago.

The 39-year-old MP for the Zaka Central constituency in the heart of
Zimbabwe says: "Education is in a deplorable state and has been decomposing
in recent years until the elections in 2008. Because the joint government is
not working properly, we cannot get enough funds into schools where teachers
have classes of 50 or 60 children. They have no books, no pens and
classrooms are bad.

"It is no way to teach our children who are our future. We once had the best
educational system in Africa - but not now."

Mr Harrison, who taught for 15 years and was a member of the militant
Progressive Teachers' Union of Zimbabwe, said only 90,000 of the 150,000
teaching posts are currently filled after many quit or fled abroad during
the economic crisis and political oppression by Mugabe's Zanu-PF party
thugs, police, army and intelligence agencies.

Over recent weeks in nearby Masvingo, teachers complained that they and
pupils were forced to attend Zanu-PF rallies by so-called war veterans,
while in Rushinga teachers were targetted for contributing to the debate on
a new constitution. Zanu-PF youths claimed they would influence pupils in
favour of MDC proposals who in turn would influence parents.

Many political analysts believe ageing president Mugabe will call another
election next year, which the MDC fears will result in another re-run of
2008 when about 200 of their supporters were killed and hundreds injured in
a widespread policy of intimidation.

Despite claims that opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai won the vote, the
two parties eventually agreed to a shaky government of national unity.

Mr Harrison, who is married with three children aged 19, 10 and seven, has
been arrested 12 times in the past and tortured by secret police but says he
will never be quiet.

"I won't move an inch and am prepared to die for what I believe in," he
says. "I value peace, democracy, transparency and will not be silenced as
long as I am fighting for a better Zimbabwe.

"I am worried about my family but they give me the courage to continue my
work. I have people all the time shouting threats like, 'We will kill you,'
and 'We will eliminate you like in 2008'. They are war veterans, Zanu-PF
activists, militia. They say we are not going to win next year but we will."

Mr Harrison still keeps close contact with schools and teachers who earn as
little as £135 a month.

"We have to improve working conditions in our schools and invest money in
our children," he says. "No one will hinder my fight for better education."


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Zimbabwean women face execution for drug smuggling in Malaysia

http://www.thezimbabwemail.com/

19 November, 2010 12:34:00    Staff Reporter

SELANGOR, MALAYSIA - The Malaysian police have arrested six foreigners
including two Zimbabweans in the last three days for smuggling drugs into
the country, a Malaysian police official said Friday.
Speaking at a press conference here in Selangor, a central state in west
coast Peninsula Malaysia, the official said that the suspects included three
Iranian males, two Zimbabwean females and a Nigerian male.

Once convicted, they could be sentenced to death under the Malaysian law,
said the official.

According to the police, this is the first time that suspected drug traders
from Zimbabwe were held in Malaysia.

Syabu of 11.4 kilograms worth 2.8 million ringgit (909,000 U.S. dollars)
were seized from the drug mules, said the official.

He also said that the suspects not only hid the drugs in the inner layer of
their luggage, but also in the oil filters of vehicles and rollers of
escalators.

The two Iranian men were believed to come from the same syndicate as the way
they had carried the drugs were similar, said the official.


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A letter from the diaspora



Friday, 19 November 2010

‘The dictator only lets go of what he can control’ I read that comment
somewhere as I was studying the reports of Aung San Su Kyi’s release from
house arrest last week and I wondered how the generals were going to
‘control’ this woman. Were there any conditions attached to her release, she
was asked. No, none, came the firm answer. She wanted a ‘revolution’ she
told the BBC journalist who interviewed her after her release, but not
through violence.
In most people’s minds, the words revolution and violence go together.
History shows us that ‘the overthrow or repudiation of a regime or political
system by the governed’, as the dictionary defines revolution, generally
comes about through massive social upheavals accompanied by violence and
bloodshed.
In Zimbabwe, Zanu PF boasts that it is a revolutionary party. The means
whereby the system of white rule was overthrown was, in reality, a war of
liberation from an unjust system where skin colour and racial identity were
the deciding factors. In fact the ‘revolution’ did not change the system, it
merely changed the colour of those in power. The war that the ‘revolutionary’
party is fighting thirty one years later is, so we are told, to defend that
revolution. The MDC cannot be allowed to gain power, goes the ‘reasoning’
because they are no more than British-backed imperialists, nothing more than
a cover for the return of the country to white colonial rule. No evidence is
given to support this claim but as propaganda it serves its purpose - even
though half the population was not even born when the whites ruled.
The ‘revolution’ Mugabe boasts of on every occasion, was won through the
barrel of the gun, not through the ballot box and everything that is
happening in Zimbabwe today as we head towards 2011 and possible elections
shows that Zanu PF has not changed; violence and repression are still their
weapons of choice. On Tuesday, we heard reports that Zanu PF has drafted the
General Laws Amendment Bill to prevent public access to information such as
court judgements, legislation, official notices and public registers – that
would of course, include electoral rolls. Mugabe’s spokesman George Charamba
stated quite categorically this week that “he had no intention of issuing
licences to private players (in the media field) until the government
develops the capacity to monitor and regulate the new players.” Only let go
of what you can control! Journalists are increasingly being picked up and
any journo reporting police misbehaviour can be sure he will find himself in
custody. Threats against citizens such as Minister David Coltart are issued
openly by the likes of so-called war vet, Joseph Chinotimba and the police
do nothing. Such is the absence of the rule of law in Mugabe’s Zimbabwe.
Strangely enough, even war vets themselves are liable to be turned off the
farms they took from the whites if someone comes along prepared to pay a
good price for the land. The Chinese, with Zanu PF approval, this week took
over a resettled farm for a brick making project, leaving the war vets with
no land, no homes and no crops – just like the white farmers the war vets
kicked out. It’s dog eat dog in Zimbabwe.
As the Unity Government stumbles towards its almost inevitable demise, SADC
meets today in Gaberone to discuss Zimbabwe – yet again. Mugabe says he will
abide by the GPA but only when sanctions are lifted. Perhaps the time has
come to put Mugabe and the regime to the test: lift the sanctions and see
whether he will honour the Agreement he signed two years ago. Will Zanu PF
call off their dogs of war; will we have free and fair elections with
international monitors in place; will the media be free to report; will the
ZRP once again uphold the rule of law and will the army stop their
relentless violence against innocent civilians? Whether the lifting of
sanctions will bring about that transformation in Zimbabwe so that citizens
of all races can live together without fear in a truly democratic society
is, as they say, the $64.000 question.  Never forget, the dictator only lets
go of what he can control.

Yours in the (continuing) struggle PH. aka Pauline Henson

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