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After 28 years, Robert Mugabe agrees to share power

The Times
September 12, 2008

Martin Fletcher
President Mugabe of Zimbabwe and his bitter enemy Morgan Tsvangirai agreed a
deal last night that looks likely to end the octogenarian leader's 28-year
monopoly on power in his shattered country.

The potentially historic agreement to set up a government of national unity
was announced by Thabo Mbeki, the South African President, who has spent
weeks seeking to resolve the crisis caused by this year's highly contentious
presidential election.

"An agreement has been reached on all items on the agenda," he told a press
conference in Harare. "All of them endorsed the document tonight. I am
absolutely certain that the leadership of Zimbabwe is committed to
implementing these agreements."

He gave no details ahead of a formal signing ceremony to be attended by
regional leaders in Harare on Monday.

Western officials hesitated to declare that Zimbabwe's long period of
oppression and misrule was over. One European Union diplomat said: "The
devil is in the details. We will see on Monday how the power is shared and
if the opposition has more than a symbolic role."
Peter Hain, the former Africa Minister, said: "Tsvangirai quite rightly held
out as the winner of a relatively free and fair election. He has held out
for power and for Mugabe to be a ceremonial president. If Mugabe has
accepted that and we are in that kind of territory then it has now provided
for a peaceful way out."

Martin Rupiyah, director of African research at Cranfield University, said:
"The infrastructure for state-spon-sored violence is still in place."

Mr Tsvangirai, leader of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), won March's
presidential election but was denied an outright victory by the Mugabe
regime's blatant vote-rigging. He withdrew just days before the June 27
run-off following a sustained campaign of violence and intimidation by the
regime's militiamen.

Mr Mbeki has spent two months seeking to establish a government of national
unity, but Mr Tsvangirai and Mr Mugabe have been unable to agree who should
wield executive power.

Mr Tsvangirai was willing to let Mr Mugabe remain ceremonial president, with
immunity from prosecution, provided that he himself became prime minister
with full executive powers.

He said that he was also willing to work with moderate members of Mr Mugabe's
Zanu-PF party.

But while Mr Mugabe was prepared to see Mr Tsvangirai become prime minister,
he was not prepared to surrender power, and it remains unclear whether he
has agreed to do so. The 84-year-old dictator is a master tactician who has
repeatedly outwitted his younger opponent.

The two men were also unable to agree which party should control the
security forces, and how long the transitional government should rule before
fresh elections are held.

Western powers would withhold the aid needed to rebuild Zimbabwe's shattered
economy if Mr Mugabe did not cede real power.

The country's official inflation rate is 11.2 million per cent. A third of
its 12 million citizens have fled. Most of those who remain survive on
barely a bowl of sadza - mealie-meal porridge - a day. Services such as
health, education and transport have all but collapsed, Aids is rampant and
Zimbabwe has the world's lowest life expectancy.

Comments
Its good news to the Zimbabweans. I agree with Luigi that its a less
embarassing exit for Mugabe but disagree that he doesnt see it benefiting
common people.This whole deal is meant for people i think and there will be
scrutiny and accountability which is what is lacking right now.

mark, london, uk

Finally! Now the old man could finally retire.

Luigi, Brooklyn, NY, USA

I dont see any benefits accruing to the common people as long as Mugabe is
in power.Noone in their right mind can trully believe Mugabe can cede
meaningful power to anyone as long as he is part of the government,in any
capacity.Perhaps its only a way to make his exit less embarrising .

Adhazhi, hitchin, uk


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Economic realities that forced Mugabe to retreat


The devil will be in the detail when Zimbabwe's historic deal is signed

Chris McGreal, Africa correspondent
The Guardian,
Friday September 12 2008

Robert Mugabe expended a lot of energy on denouncing the leader of the
Movement for Democratic Change, Morgan Tsvangirai, as nothing more than a
"British puppet" who only wanted to return the land to white farmers. The
only leader the country has known in its 28 years of independence said he
would rather go back to the bush and fight another liberation war than hand
over Zimbabwe to Tsvangirai.

But yesterday, Mugabe was apparently persuaded to face reality under the
unrelenting pressure of economic collapse and a desperate and hungry
population, agreeing to cede most of his powers to Tsvangirai.

The MDC leader's refusal to buckle and recognise Mugabe's flawed claim to
power under pressure from some African leaders, and the continued assault on
his party's MPs and activists, had meant there was no prospect of Zimbabwe
getting the foreign aid it needs to rebuild the economy.

Mugabe had retained power through a bloody campaign against the voters,
overturning Tsvangirai's victory in the first round of the presidential
election in March and claiming 90% of the vote in a second round three
months later. But it did not confer legitimacy on Mugabe's claim to be
president and he had no solutions to the deepening crisis, as inflation
surged to about 20m percent.

Tsvangirai will now become prime minister at the head of a council of
ministers. There are likely to be more than 30 of them, which could prove
unwieldy. But the council will be the principal organ of government, while
Mugabe chairs a less powerful cabinet.

The council of ministers is to be divided between the MDC and Zanu-PF, and
the division of the portfolios has yet to be agreed, which has the potential
for further disagreement.

Mugabe wants Zanu-PF to keep control of the military through the defence
ministry. The MDC can live with that, provided it has authority over the
police, which will prove crucial in ensuring the fairness of future
elections. But it is unclear if Zanu-PF will agree.

There may also be fundamental disagreement over land policy and the future
of the formerly white-owned farms whose seizure helped to bring down the
economy.

The opposition remained cautious last night, saying it believed Mugabe could
yet back away before the signing of the agreement on Monday.

There is also concern among some of Mugabe's critics who say he is skilled
at outmanoeuvring his opponents and could still wield considerable
influence.

Nonetheless, one MDC official said that it was not in Tsvangirai's interests
to reach an agreement that did not give him real power, because if he was
unable to dramatically improve the lives of Zimbabweans he would be
finished.

Foreign donors, including Britain and the US, said there would be no aid if
Mugabe retained power - a trump card in Tsvangirai's negotiations.

The price of change has been high. About 4 million Zimbabweans - one quarter
of the population - have left the country in recent years in search of work
to feed their families. Hundreds have been murdered, thousands beaten and
tortured, and tens of thousands driven from their homes in the regime's
desperate efforts to cling to power.


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Mbeki defends quiet diplomacy

http://www.thezimbabwetimes.com/?p=3926

September 12, 2008

By Raymond Maingire

HARARE - South African President Thabo Mbeki has defended his quiet
diplomacy approach to Zimbabwe's political situation which has finally
clinched him a power-sharing deal between Zimbabwe's feuding political
parties that remained elusive for so long.

Mbeki is the SADC appointed negotiator to Zimbabwe's power-sharing deal.

The South African leader on Thursday made history by brokering the power
sharing agreement that is set to end nearly 10 years of political feud and
economic recession.

Mbeki insists his quiet diplomacy was the correct approach to Zimbabwe's
political crisis.

"All diplomacy is quiet. If it is not quiet then it's not diplomacy," Mbeki
said to journalists at the Rainbow Towers in Harare when he formally
announced the fruition of the negotiations.

"We have never paid any particular attention to the criticism of quiet
diplomacy," Mbeki said.

Mbeki says he has used the same approach in other countries within Africa
which have never questioned his approach to their politics.

"We have been involved in other political negotiations as well so on and
handled those negotiations in exactly the same way.

"Nobody ever protested that there was quiet diplomacy in our negotiations
about DRC, quiet diplomacy in Cote d' Voire, Burundi , or Lesotho or
whatever and so on.

"There seems to be a particular concern about Zimbabwe.  The same processes
that in other countries were perfectly acceptable seem to be unacceptable
with regard to Zimbabwe for some reason that we don't understand."

Mbeki's critics say he was too much in awe of President Mugabe that he could
not criticize him publicly for anything.

The apparent admiration Mbeki has for Mugabe was seen at something that
compromised impartiality in his efforts to broker a deal between the ruling
Zanu-PF and the opposition MDC.

Meanwhile, the South African leader has dismissed rumours that his eagerness
to secure a power -sharing deal in Zimbabwe was a direct response to threats
by the world's soccer governing body FIFA.

He denies he was pressurized by FIFA to find a quick solution to the
Zimbabwean crisis as a condition for the forthcoming sports extravaganza to
remain committed to South Africa.

"There is nobody anywhere in the world who has ever suggested that it was
important to find the solution to the problems here in Zimbabwe in the
context of the 2010 FIFA world cup."

"Last year, 2007, SADC formally asked South Africa to act as facilitator and
this year the African Union did the same thing. None of it bore any
relationship to 2010."

Mbeki denied recent press reports that say that he came to Zimbabwe Monday
armed with a document that spelt out how he should break the impasse in
Zimbabwe's power sharing talks.

"We have never received any proposal from the African Union about these
negotiations of any kind,' he said, "That report is false, entirely false.
There has never been any such thing."

The historical settlement between the parties is widely viewed as the
panacea to resolving Zimbabwe's economic woes that have seen nearly a
quarter of the population leaving the country for economic havens abroad.

Inflation is pegged at an official 11 million percent and more than 80 per
cent of the adult population is out of formal employment.

The South African leader denied he has had any frustrating moments when he
took the parties through acrimonious deliberations.

Mbeki has come under strong criticism for soft peddling the Zimbabwean
problem.


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Key dates in Zimbabwe's crisis

africasia

HARARE, Sept 12 (AFP)

Zimbabwe's political rivals clinched a powersharing agreement late Thursday
ending an ongoing political crisis in the southern African country.

Here are some key dates since the first round of the election plunged
Zimbabwe into crisis:

- March 29: Zimbabweans vote in first round parliamentary and presidential
elections.

- April 2: Results released by Zimbabwe's electoral commission show
President Robert Mugabe's ZANU-PF party losing its majority in parliament
for the first time since independence, though there is still no word on the
presidential results.

- May 2: After an extended delay amid mounting international concern,
opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai is finally declared the winner of the
presidential election with 47.9 percent of the vote against 43.2 percent for
Mugabe -- just short of an outright majority that would avoid a second
round.

- May 16: Two weeks after the opposition's majority is announced, the
electoral commission officially sets a run-off presidential election for
June 27 in a notice placed in an extraordinary government gazette.

- June 22: Tsvangirai, leader of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC),
announces his withdrawal from the run-off election. He denounces an "orgy of
violence". The MDC says that over 200 of its supporters have been killed.

- June 23: The UN Security Council unanimously condemns the violence and
intimidation against the opposition, saying they made it impossible to hold
a free and fair presidential run-off vote.

- June 27: Zimbabweans cast ballots in a one-candidate presidential run-off
election, with widespread claims of voters being forced to polling stations
to support Mugabe.

- June 29: Mugabe declared the winner by a landslide and again sworn in as
president at State House.

- July 1: African Union leaders at a summit in Egypt, attended by Mugabe,
call for the formation of a government of national unity.

- July 4: Mugabe rules out talks with the opposition unless it acknowledges
his presidential election victory.

- July 10: Mugabe's ZANU-PF party and the MDC begin first round of
preliminary talks in Pretoria.

- July 11: China and Russia veto a draft UN resolution drawn up by the
United States which would have imposed sanctions against the Mugabe regime.

- July 21: The authorities and the political opposition sign a deal that
paves the way for detailed talks on resolving the country's crisis.

- July 22: The European Union strengthens its sanctions against the Zimbabwe
regime.

- July 24: Talks between the authorities and the opposition start on
Zimbabwe's political future.

- July 25: The United States extends its sanctions.

- Aug 10-12: Marathon negotiations in Harare on a power sharing deal.

- Aug 17: A summit of Southern African leaders in Johannesburg fails to
secure an accord on a government of national unity but says Zimbabwe's
parliament may need to be convened while talks continue.

- Aug 25: The new parliament is sworn in. The main MDC national chairman
Lovemore Moyo - nominated by Tsvangirai's faction - is elected by 110 votes
to the key post of speaker of parliament with no candidate put forward by
the ruling ZANU-PF.

- Aug 26: Parliament is officially opened by Mugabe who is met with jeers
from the MDC MPs.

- Aug 27: The state daily the Herald reports that Mugabe will form a new
government soon despite the fact that the talks with the opposition are
stalled.

- Aug 29: Mediator Thabo Mbeki launches a last-ditch attempt to get the
powersharing talks back on track and the parties go to South Africa for
negotiations.

- Aug 31: The parties return home to Zimbabwe with no sign of breaking the
impasse.

- Sept 4: Mugabe threatens to go ahead and form a government if a deal is
not signed that day.

- Sept 5: The MDC calls for the stalled talks to be unlocked.

- Sept 7: Tsvangirai tells a massive MDC rally that he will not sign a deal
that does not give him "sufficient powers". He also calls for a new vote if
a powersharing agreement cannot be reached.

- Sept 8: Mediator Mbeki flies to Harare to resume powersharing
negotiations.

- Sept 10: After a marathon 12-hour meeting both Mugabe and Tsvangirai hint
that a deal is close.

- Sept 11: Mbeki announces that the parties have reached a powersharing
agreement and will form an inclusive government. Details of the deal will be
made public next Monday after a formal signing ceremony.


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Secretary-General welcomes agreement in Zimbabwe on government of natural unity

United Nations Secretary-General

Date: 11 Sep 2008

SG/SM/11787
AFR/1743

The following statement was issued today by the Spokesperson for UN
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon:

The Secretary-General welcomes the agreement reached today in Harare between
the Government and the opposition on a Government of national unity.

He hopes that this agreement will pave the way for a durable peace and
recovery in the country and contribute to rapid improvement in the welfare
and human rights of the people of Zimbabwe, who have suffered for long.

He congratulates the parties for reaching agreement and commends the
mediator, President Thabo Mbeki, for his tireless efforts to help them reach
it.

The United Nations has been supporting the mediation process through the
role of the Secretary-General's envoy, Haile Menkerios, in the Reference
Group.


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Zimbabwe deal boosts rand: analysts

SABC

September 12, 2008, 06:45

South African analysts say news of a political settlement in Zimbabwe and
higher precious metal prices have buoyed the rand. Wall Street posted solid
gains last night which could boost investor confidence.

The local currency has recovered by almost 2% against the US dollar in after
hours trade.

On the capital market, the yield on the R153 government bond ended yesterday
at 9.94%.

US and European markets
US stocks rose yesterday as a report that major US investment bank Lehman
Brothers is shopping itself to possible suitors, including Bank of America,
drove a last-minute rebound in financial shares. A two dollar fall oil
prices also boosted the market, easing concern about consumer and business
spending.

The Dow Jones rallied 165 points, or 1.5% to 11 434. The Nasdaq Composite
rose 30 points, or 1.3% to 2 258. The S & P 500 ended 17 points up at 1 249.

Financial stocks weighed on Europe's major markets. London's FTSE 100
retreated 48 points to 5 318. In Paris the CAC 40 gave up 35 points to 4
249, while Frankfurt's DAX shaved off 31 points to 6 179.

Asian markets
Markets in the Asia-Pacific region are mixed this morning. In Tokyo the
Nikkei slipped three points to 120 99. In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng dipped 31
points to 19 358, while Sydney's ASX climbed 21 points to 4 836.

Platinum is trading at $1174/oz and the spot price for Brent crude oil is
softer at $95.98 a barrel.

See the latest indicators at the bottom of the front page.


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Moyo Challenges Election Of Speaker

http://www.thezimbabweindependent.com


Thursday, 11 September 2008 22:11
INDEPENDENT Member of Parliament for Tsholotsho North Jonathan Moyo
yesterday said that he intends to challenge in the High Court the election
of MDC-T's Lovemore Moyo as speaker of the house of assembly on the bases
that the elections were not free and fair.
Moyo, who nominated Paul Themba Nyathi for Speaker from the smaller
formation of the MDC led by Arthur Mutambara, said it was his duty to make
sure that the new Zimbabwe was not built on a "platform of fraud" and said
he was consulting his lawyers on the course of action to take. He said the
elections were a circus.
However, Morgan Tsvangirai's camp in a statement this week, claimed
that Moyo and Zanu PF were plotting to reverse the results "to prevent a
robust and vibrant parliament".
It said: "The MDC would like to make it clear that the MPs' vote for
Lovemore Moyo was a true reflection of the will of the people of Zimbabwe.
It represents a triumph for democracy, which has shocked the deadwood in
Zanu PF. The election of Moyo as Speaker of Parliament remains a historic
occasion, which cannot be reversed by losers, regardless of whatever
machinations they can concoct to reverse the people's will."
The former Minister of Information and publicity described the claims
of a plot as "a jumpy and jittery reaction of poor folks who are guilty".
"This is a classical example that the guilty are always afraid because
they know only too well the gravity of their speaker's electoral fraud. That
is why they are running scared and throwing mud all over the place. Everyone
saw what the MDC MP's were doing -showing their ballot papers to (deputy
president Thokozani) Khupe and (party chief whip Innocent) Goneso.
"Somebody must tell them that their claim of plot against their
embattled speaker is preposterous because an open court application cannot
be a plot. It is a simple and straightforward legal matter which they should
handle legally unless they know they have something to hide from the court."
He disputed allegations that the challenge was brought about at a
strategy workshop held by MDC Mutambara faction in Kadoma last weekend which
he Moyo attended.
"As for those who are manufacturing idiotic stories about what they
imagine or wish I said at the MDC-Mutambara workshop in Kadoma last weekend,
I challenge them to have the courage of their idiocy and submit affidavits
with their Kadoma allegations to the court in support of their speaker's
indefensible electoral fraud that was committed in broad daylight with
breath-taking arrogance.
"As one of Paul Themba Nyathi's election agents on the day I have
legal and ethical obligation to bring the matter to justice without any fear
or favour whatsoever," Moyo said.
Lovemore Moyo was elected Speaker of Parliament after he garnered 110
votes against former MP Nyathi who received 98 votes.


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Two MDC MPs Granted Bail

http://www.thezimbabweindependent.com

Thursday, 11 September 2008 22:10
TWO MDC MPs who were still in police custody after the state appealed
against their release were yesterday freed on bail by the High Court.
The MPs, Pearson Mungofa of Highfield and Bednock Nyaude of Bindura
South, were granted bail last week but were not released after the state
appealed against the move.
The state had evoked provisions of the Criminal Procedure and Evidence
Act which allow it to file an appeal for up to seven days while the suspect
is in remand.
Mungofa is accused of teaming up with Tichaona Mudzingwa and spreading
lies that Morgan Tsvangirai had won the March 29 harmonised elections while
Nyaude was arrested on attempted murder charges and contravening the
Firearms Act.
MDC lawyer Alec Muchadehama said the High Court yesterday morning
granted bail to the MPs.
"The High Court issued a desist order against the state appeal and the
MPs were granted bail," he said.
However, Muchadehama expressed concern over the delays in trials of
more than 80 MDC supporters around the country who were arrested on charges
of either inciting violence, causing malicious damage to property or
attempted murder.
"A lot of MDC supporters are having their liberty being constrained.
Their matters stretch as far as March 29 but it's now six months and they
still have not set trial dates."
The highest number of the MDC activists in remand prison are from
Mashonaland Central, especially areas like Bindura and Chiweshe, and from
Manicaland.
Meanwhile Epworth MP Eliah Jembere who was further remanded out of
custody to October 20, had his wife Judith detained and interrogated for
seven hours on Monday. She was later released after the intervention of
Muchadehama.
MDC spokesperson Nelson Chamisa said the continued harassment of MDC
legislators by the state security agents was a direct affront to the will of
the people who voted for change on March 29.
Two other legislators who have since been released on bail facing
different charges are Mathias Mlambo of Chipinge East and Trevor Saruwaka of
Mutasa


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Gono's New Policy Challenges MDC, Zanu PF

http://www.thezimbabweindependent.com


Thursday, 11 September 2008 22:06
RESERVE Bank of Zimbabwe governor Gideon Gono this week dropped a
brazen challenge to Zanu PF and the MDC formations currently involved in
interparty talks by introducing a raft of new policy measures which appear
unpalatable to the two main political parties.
The governor introduced measures which analysts say amounted to
dollarising the economy through the back door while at the same time
claiming a stake in the country's power distribution matrix, whatever the
outcome of talks.
Gono on Wednesday introduced measures to license selected wholesalers,
retailers, fuel importers and fuels retailers to transact in foreign
currency. He also re-affirmed the central bank's commitment to continue with
quasi-fiscal measures in the form of Bacossi to the people programme, the
Medical and Health Sector Support Programme and the Medical and Health
Profession Skills Retention Programme. The QFAs have been frowned upon by
the opposition which has regarded these as fueling inflation and causing
arbitrage in the economy.
On the other hand, the Zanu PF government has resisted attempts to
dollarise the economy largely for the sake of protecting its nationalistic
dogma.
Ordinarily one would have expected Gono to tread with caution on
policy issues especially at this critical point in the talks when his
adversary Morgan Tsvangirai is likely to be handed the reins to steer the
economy. But notwithstanding the seemingly apparent pitfalls of introducing
fresh policy, Gono this week chose to dare both parties in a business as
usual approach.
So audacious was RBZ governor that in introducing the new measures, he
invited the nation to steam ahead with him instead of  being bogged down by
politicians from the MDC formations and Zanu PF whom  he implored to "use
their  talents (of talking) wisely and for the benefit of every loyal  but
suffering  subjects they are supposed to be representing".
Gono's impatience with politicians has resonated in his past policy
statements with the last jab coming from his half term policy statement in
July when he urged the parties to "conclude their ongoing strategic
deliberations in a constructive manner which puts Zimbabwe first".
This week, he raised the ante by suggesting that the politicians were
"busy ignoring" key issues.  In the absence of crucial political
intervention Gono has moved in to fill  the power vacuum and he chose to
invite the public and not politicians to the crusade.
"We must do whatever it takes to improve our economy, boost productive
capacity of our industries, our mines and agriculture."
He added: "Let us get on with it - politicians will join us later when
they have exhausted their talking talents."
This is not the first time though that Gono has invited the nation to
rally behind his projects.
What is of significance this time however is the timing of this latest
call to arms. It is coming at a time when opposition supporters and their
leaders - who have dismissed his turnaround plans as ineffectual - are
looking to chart a new path for the economy by removing Gono from the pilot's
seat.
In Masvingo a week before the March presidential polls, MDC
secretary-general Tendai Biti fired expletives at Gono whom he branded "the
Taliban" and "Al Qaeda". There has not been any public rebuttal of that
statement by the party.
The challenge facing Gono - whose tenure expires in two months time -
is what to do with his basket of plans and projects in the event that
Tsvangirai comes into the fray to implement his party's economic policies.
There are two clear options; to cede control and allow a successor
administration to tear down his power edifice or to stand firm to influence
measures that would ensure that MDC plans fit into his template.
The first option entails that he leaves after supervising the
dismembering of institutions he has constructed to support QFAs. At the
moment he still holds the national cheque book and is sending a loud message
that in the absence of parliament, he can take charge to determine policy
and run government.
He has in past said he is ready to leave if told that his services are
no longer desired. But over years the governor has built a strong power base
which encompasses politicians from the political divide, security forces,
the academia and private sector. Is he going to be tempted by this power
base to hang on? - Own Correspondent.


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'Harare on cholera time-bomb'

http://www.thezimbabweindependent.com


Thursday, 11 September 2008 22:04
HARARE is sitting on a cholera time bomb that may detonate anytime
after the failure by the Zimbabwe National Water Authority (Zinwa) to repair
burst sewer pipes and restore normal water supplies, the Combined Harare
Residents Association (CHRA) and the Zimbabwe Association of Doctors for
Human Rights (ZADHR) have said.
The warning came following last week's death of 11 people in
Chitungwiza from cholera while 35 others were admitted at the dormitory city's
government hospital.
Justice Mavedzenge, CHRA information officer, told the Zimbabwe
Independent that while the cholera outbreak was scientifically proven in
Chitungwiza, a number of residential areas in Harare were under threat of
the water-borne disease.
He said preventive measures by the government and other responsible
organisations were needed in the capital.
Mavedzenge said: "Our findings reveal that serious cases of the
disease can be noted in other residential places like Msasa, Letombo,
Mabvuku, Tafara, Warren Park especially Warren Park 1, Mufakose,
Dzivarasekwa, and Glen View, among others. We are trying to investigate
whether these cases are just diarrhoea or cholera. We haven't heard much in
the low density suburbs."
Mavedzenge said the shortage of clean water supply, exposure to raw
sewage and uncollected garbage were causing the disease.
"In Mabvuku many residents are drilling wells at their homes, some of
them are drilled by inexperienced people who do not have knowledge on how
the sewer underground pipes were laid. They might think they have reached
the water table while they have reached the sewer table," he said.
Mavedzenge blasted Zinwa for incompetence.
"Zinwa is just defunct, it has no adequate technology and other
resources and it lacks innovation. I don't know why the government continues
to defend it. My recent visit to Zinwa showed that some of the workers were
ignorant of the problems while it is their duty to report to the people," he
said.
He condemned the government's approach of taking action when a crisis
has occurred, saying preventive measures should always be in place.
"The government has to wait for people to die and then they appear
like they are concerned but when residents speak out raising their problems
they ignore them," said Mavedzenge.
He said CHRA was organising a "massive" protest against the cholera
crisis and the incompetence of Zinwa as well as boycotting payment of water
bills.
ZADHR chairman, Douglas Gwatidzo, expressed disappointment at the
government's failure to address sanitation problems and provide clean water.
He said: "We are sitting on a time bomb that can explode anytime as a
result of the unavailability of a reliable source of water, the flow of raw
sewage in residential areas and piling of uncollected garbage around Harare
and surrounding areas."
Gwatidzo said raw sewage was flowing freely into Harare's main source
of water - Lake Chivero - and Zinwa has been failing to treat the water
adequately, endangering the lives of residents.
Health minister David Parirenyatwa said the government had dealt with
the Chitungwiza cholera outbreak.
"The situation is well controlled and cases have come down. The
medication and everything else is there to ensure the proper treatment of
patients. However, there is need to monitor the constant supply of clean
water and improvement on sanitation so as to totally control the disease,"
he said.
Efforts to get a comment from Minister of State Water Resources and
Infrastructural Development, Munacho Mutezo, were fruitless at the time of
going to print.
A snap survey by the Independent revealed that residents in Harare in
both high and low density areas were exposed to raw sewage.
In St Mary's, Chitungwiza, children could be seen playing barefooted
in sewage streams in the streets while in areas like Zengeza 3 Extension,
Chigovanyika and Unit O, raw sewage was gushing out and flowing in rivulets.


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MDC-Mutambara Says MDC-T, Zanu PF Undermining Party

http://www.thezimbabweindependent.com


Thursday, 11 September 2008 22:00
THE Arthur Mutambara-led MDC has accused the faction headed by Morgan
Tsvangirai and Zanu PF of undermining the party and attempting to divide it.
In a statement denying that its 10 House of Assembly members voted
alongside Tsvangirai parliamentarians to elect Lovemore Moyo as speaker, the
MDC-Mutambara camp said it would resist attempts to cause divisions in the
party.
Moyo is the national chairperson of the MDC-Tsvangirai and was elected
speaker of the House of Assembly on August 20 after he defeated the
Mutambara faction candidate Paul Themba Nyathi by garnering 110 votes
against 98.
His election took place amid allegations that nine MPs from the
Mutambara formation had recently met Tsvangirai, his deputy Thokozani Khupe
and Moyo in Botswana and agreed to support Moyo ahead of Nyathi in exchange
for positions and unrevealed incentives.
"It was also noted that there was a concerted effort being made by
both Zanu PF and MDC-Tsvangirai to undermine the MDC and that the party
should not fall prey to these machinations by allowing these parties to sow
division in our ranks," read the statement issued after the party met at the
weekend in Kadoma.
During the meeting, the MPs who were reported to have gone to Botswana
confirmed meeting Moyo, but denied that he asked them to back him.
The nine legislators implicated were Edward Mkhosi (Mangwe West),
Abednico Bhebhe (Nkayi South), Njabuliso Mguni (Lupane), Nomalanga Mzilikazi
Khumalo (Mzingwane), Siyabonga Malandu Ncube (Insiza North), Norman Mpofu
(Mangwe East), Maxwell Dube (Tsholotsho South), Patrick Dube (Gwanda North)
and Thandeko Mkandla (Gwanda South).
"In the circumstances it was unanimously resolved that the
Botswana/speaker issue would be closed and that the MDC would move ahead
with its parliamentary agenda," the party said. "In this regard it was
agreed that the MDC would be aligned to democracy and to the principles of
freedom, tolerance, transparency and respect for the rule of law rather than
any political party in the pursuit of its parliamentary agenda."
The party's 16 MPs - 10 in the House of Assembly and six in Senate,
assured the meeting of their support of the MDC and Mutambara's leadership.
"These assurances were accepted by the meeting," the statement read.
The Mutambara faction also re-affirmed its neutral position regarding
the tripartite negotiations aimed at resolving Zimbabwe's decade-long
crisis, stressing that there would be no bilateral agreement would signed
with Zanu PF in breach of the July memorandum of understanding between the
three parties. - Staff Writers.


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MDC Turns 9, Says Has Key To Resources

http://www.thezimbabweindependent.com


Thursday, 11 September 2008 21:56
MKOBA Stadium in Gweru was on Sunday turned into a sea of red, black
and white colours as MDC celebrated its ninth anniversary with leader Morgan
Tsvangirai vowing to "deliver freedom" to Zimbabwe by unshackling it from
President Robert Mugabe's chains of "misrule".
The 15 000-plus party supporters, who braved the spring sun, waved
placards, most of them hailing Tsvangirai's courage in tackling Mugabe, a
former guerilla leader who has been in power since 1980.
"Morgan is more", "Your Excellency, President Tsvangirai" and "Morgan
ndizvo", read some of the placards.
Apart from the placards, the party's supporters and the leadership
donned MDC regalia and intermittently broke into song and dance, poking
funny at Mugabe and Zanu PF.
Among the leadership were national chairman Lovemore Matombo, deputy
president Thokhozani Khupe, secretary-general Tendai Biti, deputy
treasurer-general Elton Mangoma, national organising secretary Ellias
Mudzuri and spokesperson Nelson Chamisa.
As time ticked away before Tsvangirai took to the podium, the
supporters became weary and instead of chanting the party slogans started
complaining of hunger.
The supporters drowned the voice of Mudzuri who tried in vain to calm
them, but normalcy returned when Chamisa took to the podium and started
ridiculing Zanu PF and government departments.
Chamisa said: "I am happy that we have members of the CIO (Central
Intelligence Organisation) here today. We welcome their presence at this
celebration. One thing that they are also realising is that the direction in
which the wind is blowing has since changed.
"The people of Zimbabwe want change and they want it now. Let us hope
that the CIO guys who are here will go back and report what they saw here
and not exaggerate the details and sentiments passed by the people of
Zimbabwe."
Biti, clad in flowing robes normally worn by West Africans, told the
supporters that the MDC was demanding power-transfer from Mugabe to
Tsvangirai in the Sadc-initiated negotiations being facilitated by South
African President Thabo Mbeki.
"The MDC is advocating power-transfer as compared to the proposal for
a transitional government. We have negotiated on a lot of things but I would
like to point out that the principle of democracy is a non-negotiable
principle," Biti said amid clapping and ululation.
"The people of Zimbabwe spoke on March 29 and clearly stated that you
were giving us the mandate to provide food, jobs, and many other things. You
also gave us the authority and we will not let go of that which you gave us
when you went and voted on March 29."
He added that the crisis in the country was a result of a defective
constitution that gives the president "too much" power.
"This constitution makes it a monarch to be a president. It gives the
president excessive powers and we are saying it is an imperialistic
constitution that needs to be overhauled," said Biti. After Biti's
curtain-raiser, Tsvangirai was given the floor and was quick to say he would
not sign an inclusive deal that does not recognise the "will of the people".
Tsvangirai said the MDC had survived the past nine years despite
several attempts by Zanu PF to destroy it.
"We are where we are today because of the resoluteness that
Zimbabweans have shown in the fight against the dictatorship of Robert
Mugabe and his Zanu PF members," he said. "It is unprecedented in the
history of Zimbabwe that a party survives infiltration and destruction and
manages to survive for nine years."
The former Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions president said the MDC
had scored a number of successes, among them transforming from an opposition
"to become the ruling party".
"We are now able to set the agenda for the full freedom of the people
of Zimbabwe. We said it in 1999 and 2000 that we will bring Zanu PF to the
negotiating table and they thought we were joking. Where is Mugabe today?"
Tsvangirai questioned.
The MDC leader said there was only one solution to the Zimbabwe
crisis - dialogue - but insisted he would not sign a "bad deal" with Mugabe
and the president of the smaller faction of the MDC, Arthur Mutambara.
"Tsvangirai's signature belongs to the people of Zimbabwe. I cannot
betray you by signing a deal that is not reflective of what you want. I am
not blind to differentiate between a good and a bad deal," Tsvangirai said.
"On March 29, you declared that you wanted change and not cosmetic change.
We are going to deliver that change to you."
He criticised Mugabe for having opted to give him a prime ministerial
post in which he did not have powers to hire and fire cabinet ministers.
"You cannot mess yourself and ask me to clean you up and then you want
to dismiss me afterwards. In the same vein, if Mugabe wants me to clean up
the mess, then he has to give me the power," Tsvangirai told ecstatic
supporters. "We have the keys to the resources. We have the people on our
side, and time is also on our side. If he (Mugabe) does not want to cede
power, he should stay there and we see where it will take us."


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Parallel Market Has Last Laugh As Gono 'dollarises' Economy

http://www.thezimbabweindependent.com


Thursday, 11 September 2008 21:54
IN a clear sign that monetary authorities are losing the battle
against the parallel market where the US dollar can be exchanged for $2 700
compared to the official rate of $60, the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe has
introduced Foreign Exchange Licensed warehouses and shops.
The shops will be introduced for an initial period of 18 months up to
March 31 2010.
"As monetary authorities, we will remain steadfast in our efforts to
innovate and find practical solutions to the challenges we see on the
 ground", governor Gideon Gono told reporters on Wednesday.
Up to 1 000 retailers and 250 wholesalers would now be able to take
payment in foreign currency.
Payments for fuel would also be permitted in foreign exchange, Gono
said.
"It is imperative to note that the current measures are neither a
condonation  nor a direct introduction of the dollarisation of the economy,"
Gono said.
The move comes at a time when there are three prices for goods and
services  in Zimbabwe the cash price, cheque  and Real Time Gross Settlement
(RTGS).
At a local shop in Harare a kilogramme  of beef was on Wednesday being
sold for $3 000 for cash. The same quantity was being sold for $32 000 with
RTGS while it cost $6 500 by cheque. A 12 litre carton of Mazoe orange was
being sold for $15 000 cash, $175 000 RTGS, and $30 000 by cheque. The same
commodities could be bought in either US dollars or South African rands.
Genesis Bank group economist Brains Muchemwa said the price
differentials between cash and RTGS' for the same commodities was reflecting
the huge premium attached to the scarcity of cash on the market.
"It stems largely from the shallow penetration of plastic money in the
transaction process in the economy, as well as the availability of
commodities on the informal markets that unfortunately cannot offer the
transacting public the convenience of plastic money," Muchemwa said.
"The direction of the gap between cash and RTGS values for the same
commodities will depend largely on the rate of injection of cash into the
system versus the rate of inflation," he said.
Commenting on the different prices for the same product, Harambe
Holdings' Group Treasury and Investment manager Lovemore Mapanda said
shortages of cash because of the withdrawal limits -- which was not enough
to buy two loaves of bread -- was causing a lot of distortions on the
market.
"It (Zimbabwe) is now an import economy. We are not producing
anything, as such retailers are factoring in the cost of bringing the goods
which will need to be charged in US dollars using transfer rates as cash is
not readily available," said Mapanda.
Mapanda said the economy was "overheated and a realistic cash
withdrawal system was now needed".
"All these price distortions will end once the country starts
producing and foreign currency is readily available on the market together
with our local currency," he said.
Analysts said the move by Gono was also an attempt to bring more
foreign currency into government's own depleted coffers.
By legalising the trade, government hopes to move business from the
parallel market to official channels, where it will collect 25% of private
companies' export earnings and 15% from domestic traders.
Traders in Zimbabwe have over the past two years been charging for
their goods in US dollars or the South African rand.
Most of these goods are brought in from neighbouring South Africa,
Botswana and Zambia because local industries have either stopped production
or do not produce enough to satisfy demand.
Gono on Wednesday said that the "bold measures" taken by the bank
would "if embraced in full and with positivity, enhance our preparations for
the 2010 World Cup in South Africa".
Gono said there would be "perpetual critics who would be quick to
condemn the intervention as unsustainable".
In order to be considered for licensing as a registered foreign
currency denominated shop, applicants had to submit an application to the
Reserve Bank, supported by a statement indicating the nature of trade, IT
systems used, capacity to handle foreign exchange including the availability
of counterfeit detectors and estimates of sales volumes.
A refundable security deposit had to be made to the bank --  $20 000
for single floor retail outlets and $100 000 for wholesalers.
He added that the reforms were "a pragmatic response to the realities
obtaining in the economy".
While foreign currency has remained elusive for the cash-strapped
government and in all other official channels, the dollar and the rand are
readily available on the country's parallel markets.
Zimbabwe's approval for companies and businesses to charge in foreign
currency comes on the back of a severe economic stagnation that has seen
locally produced goods disappearing  from shop shelves while foreign brands
like tinned foods, beer, canned drinks, and rice are readily available.
Last month, President Robert Mugabe banned the export of basic goods
and commodities and waived import duty for such goods in a move that was
aimed at making them readily available.
Basic goods are scarce and the Reserve Bank has repeatedly
re-denominated the Zimbabwe dollar to try keep up with inflation.
Analysts say the economy is unlikely to rebound until a post-election
crisis is resolved. President Mugabe and the two factions of the opposition
MDC led by Morgan Tsvangirai and Arthur Mutambara are in talks to forge a
new all-inclusive government after a disputed election.
Gono said manufacturers could sell to the licensed shops in foreign
currency, and that both Zimbabweans and foreigners would be allowed to run
the stores.
He however stressed the Zimbabwe dollar remained the official
currency.
Zanu PF and by extension Gono have in the past refused to "dollarise"
the economy.
The Reserve Bank said it will also sell a bond to raise foreign
exchange funds to pay for imports of food, fuel, machinery and medicines.
The bond will have a maturity of 180 days and pay an interest of 15%
in US dollar terms.
Other efforts by the Reserve Bank to boost foreign-currency earnings
include paying gold producers at the interbank exchange rate, now 62,47 to
the US dollar and giving them a 150% delivery bonus.
The  Reserve  Bank  also  increased  the corn seed price to $20 000  a
metric tonne from $13 500.
"These reforms are essentially a pragmatic response to the realities
in the economy. The move is in the interest of increasing the availability
of foreign exchange in the formal market, as well as in the interest of
promoting the general availability of basic commodities," said Gono


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RBZ Fails To Pay Gold Producers US$25m

http://www.thezimbabweindependent.com


Thursday, 11 September 2008 21:51
THE Reserve Bank has failed to pay US$25 million to gold producers for
deliveries made in June this year prompting miners to seek intervention from
the president's office, businessdigest can reveal.
In a correspondence written to Misheck Sibanda-chief secretary to the
president and cabinet two weeks ago, disgruntled gold producers appealed for
an urgent intervention from government to speed up payments by Fidelity
Printers and Refiners dating back to March.
Fidelity Printers, a subsidiary of the Reserve Bank buys the precious
metal from 354 registered gold workings that include 21 primary producers,
252 small-scale miners and 81 custom millers under a government support
price facility, which is below world market prices.
Under this facility, producers are paid 55% of the deliveries in
foreign currency with the remaining 45% being paid in local currency.
"We respectfully write this letter to humbly seek your intervention on
behalf of the gold producers in Zimbabwe as we have exhausted all other
avenues, in an attempt to receive payment due to them for gold bullion
delivered to Fidelity Printers and Refiners from as far back as March of
this year," read the letter.
Continued efforts to engage the Reserve Bank, the finance and mines
ministries through the Chamber of Mines of Zimbabwe, the letter read were
not fruitful resulting in gold miners seeking immediate assistance from the
president's office to avoid a "grind to a halt" in the troubled sector.
The gold producers also blamed delays by the Reserve Bank for
"reversing the trend" of gold production, which at peak, surged to a post
independence record of 27 metric tonnes in 1999.  Apart from the lethargic
foreign  currency  payment  arrangement,  gold producers
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From Page 3
warned that recent delays in effecting payments in local currency
could stir labour relations problems at mines.
"In recent months gold producers have experienced delays in the
payment of the Zim dollar component of revenue from gold delivered to
Fidelity Printers and Refiners. This situation has the potential to cause
severe labour relations problems as gold producers face challenges in paying
salaries and wages."
Efforts to get comment from Sibanda and the Reserve Bank governor
Gideon Gono were in vain. Meanwhile, the central bank this week awarded a
150% bonus in local currency for the gold sector in an effort to "give
impetus" to the miners.
Mining experts expect gold extractions to decline sharply to 4,5
metric tonnes owing to lack of timely payments by the central bank, power
and a host of viability problems affecting the sector.
Turning to accusations of "glaring discrepancies and financial
prejudices" leveled on the sector by the central bank, gold producers
refuted the claims saying monitoring and supervising teams comprising of
ministry of mines officials, the police minerals unit, the Reserve Bank of
Zimbabwe and forensic audit firm Alex Stewart International failed to
substantiate reports of any "underhand dealings".
A leading gold producer last month blamed declining gold deliveries to
an "artificial exchange rate", delays by the central bank in effecting
payments and bureaucracy resulting from numerous regulatory authorities.
Last year gold accounted for 10% of the country's foreign currency
earnings generating US$150 million.


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Lopping Off Zeros Fails To Save Local Currency

http://www.thezimbabweindependent.com


Thursday, 11 September 2008 21:50
THE Reserve Bank bowed to financial reality on Wednesday and legalised
the use of foreign currency in a bid to preserve real value of the recently
introduced local currency.
The move was the final humiliation for Zimbabwe's defenseless dollar,
which was worth more than the United States dollar when the country attained
independence in 1980.
Even after two revaluations in two years, the lopping off 13 zeros,
the dollar has not stopped its unprecedented depreciation against major
trading currencies.
The de facto "dollarisation" which was 'formally announced' this week
had been thriving for nearly two years. With an insufficient daily
withdrawal of $500, the transacting public had resorted to the South African
and US dollar to purchase some consumer goods.
Events on the economy had shown that Zimbabweans had lost faith on the
local currency despite statutory requirements, which continue to deem the
currency as a legal tender.
The problem with the cosmetic 'dollarisation' by the Reserve Bank
however, is that it adds to distortions in the economy in the sense that
other sections of the economy which are not dollarised will strive to
dollarise illegally fueling the parallel market.
"Without restoring viability to agriculture, boosting productivity in
all  major  sectors of the economy and adopting policies that reduce
inflation dollarisation will not be the answer," said an economist with a
commercial bank yesterday.
With the lowest note denomination of a dollar and a myriad of coins,
carrying huge bundles of increasingly worthless Zimbabwe dollar notes was
fast becoming the norm.
The Reserve Bank's reported participation in the parallel foreign
currency markets bears evidence on how close the country was close were to
dollarisation.
This strategy by the Reserve Bank was a case of "actions speak louder
than words".
Since the expulsion of Zimbabwe from critical International Monetary
Fund (IMF) balance-of-payments support programmes in 1999, the government
has employed a cocktail of economic recovery programmes most of which have
been unsuccessful.
Seasoned  economic analysts have suggested that the continued
deterioration of the economy is largely a product of policy inconsistencies
and incoherencies within government decision-making structures. Economic
analysts said the desired course of action would be to officially dollarise
the whole economy and automatically eliminate the management of interest
rates, exchange rates, and money supply of which our failure to manage these
factors has been the primary precipitator of the economic recession.
Zimbabweans appear willing to accept the loss of monetary policy
control associated with official dollarisation in order to bring normality
to the proceedings.
When inflation is running at 11,2 million percent anything is worth a
try.
It is cheaper to buy goods and services in US dollars than in local
currency.
This is because the Zimbabwe dollar prices are inflated to account for
inflationary pressure and the price of obtaining the US dollar.
If the economy is completely dollarised, then government cannot print
money anymore.
Government would have to review services and charge market prices --
most likely regional prices -- for goods and services.
Industry and commerce would have to start doing work to earn foreign
currency, not the current speculative tendencies rife on the parallel and
stock market.
  Dollarisation has considerable merit in restoring economic stability
and a sound national financial system and has been successfully pursued over
the last century by more than 30 countries.


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Zambia Switches Off Zimbabwe

http://www.thezimbabweindependent.com


Thursday, 11 September 2008 21:49
THE country's perennial power outages could further worsen following
disconnection of the Zambia-Zimbabwe interconnector on Tuesday by Zambia
Electricity Supply Corporation (Zesco) of Zambia.
Zesco's acting director for generation and transmission  told Zambian
media that the utility had switched off Zimbabwe from the interconnector to
protect local power systems from "external disturbances".
This week most parts of the country faced increased hours of power
outages despite a decline in power consumption characteristic in summer.
The local power utility however, maintains  that   energy transmission
and generation could soon improve.
Zesa group spokesperson Fullard Gwasira yesterday declined to comment
on the external disturbances which prompted the disconnection adding that
power generation could improve due to a US$40 million  energy deal with
Namibia.
He added that the disconnection had no "material impact" to the
current electricity supply.
"Zesa Holdings is not in a position to comment on the responses from
another utility although technical faults are not a unique phenomenon in the
electricity industry, not only locally but internationally as well," said
Gwasira.
The country's five power stations- Hwange (Thermal), Kariba (Hydro),
Harare (Small Thermal), Munyati (Small Thermal) and Bulawayo (Small Thermal)
are generating below capacity owing to viability problems.
Zimbabwe which shares the northern border with Zambia imports energy
from Democratic Republic of Congo-based SNEL in order to meet a peak demand
of 1950 megawatts. The country's power stations can at full capacity
generate 1050 megawatts.
This means at any given time of the day almost half of the country
will be in darkness.
"It is important to realise that Zesa Holdings is fully realising the
benefits of the US$40 million from Namibia in a win-win government to
government agreement, as it is anticipated that by the end of 2008
electricity generation from the rehabilitated units reach 480MW by the end
of the year and eventually notch maximum generation of 9500MW when stage 2
units have been rehabilitated. Plans for stage 2 refurbishment are well
under way."
Earlier this year Zesco disconnected Zesa from the interconnector
following several days of blackouts in Zambia.


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GNU Must Put People First

http://www.thezimbabweindependent.com


Thursday, 11 September 2008 21:58
RECENT media reports in Zimbabwe show that primitive consumption by
Zimbabwe's political elite has  reached unacceptable levels that reflect not
only seriously misguided policy, but also the unscrupulous and insensitive
nature of our government.

Like political violence, this cancerous evil of conspicuous
consumption has slowly eaten into the heart and soul of our national
politics which has increasingly become bereft of morality, conscience,
focus, purpose, and hope for the millions of impoverished and starving
citizens.
In the first week of August, the Herald reported that the RBZ had
pampered judges with 16 brand new top of the range Mercedes Benz E280, 42
inch plasma screen TV sets and satellite dishes, and generators. It stated
that apart from these classy Mercs, the judges also already had one more
generous donation of utility trucks such as Toyota IMV and Isuzus and that
all these benefits are provided after every five years.
By end of that week, the Zimbabwe Independent exposed that RBZ was
also allocating Westgate houses, built from the Homelink scheme, to the High
Court and Supreme Court judges. Barely, a fortnight later, the same
newspaper uncovered another shocker of a whopping government expenditure of
US$9 million to be spent on legislators' so called all-terrain vehicles.
Add to that the unsustainable allowances that the MPs are expected to
get, then you will know that we are not only faced with a morally bankrupt
political system, but also a leadership that is completely out of touch with
the dire state of the economy and the poverty that is gripping nation.
The irony of policy failure and misplaced priorities in a government
that provides its elite classes with plasma screens to be run on generators
and latest models of Mercedes Benz to be run on potholed streets is
breathtaking. This spectacular but inexcusable ineptitude that is taking
place right before the gaping wounds of economic ruin the nation incurred in
the past 10 years, shows how greedy and dehumanised our leadership has
become.
This is certainly jungle politics run by jungle politicians churning
out jungle policies characteristic of the dog-eat-dog world that has become
of our nation. How on earth does it happen that a country with four million
people living on donor aid, with a growth rate of -6%, unemployment rate of
80%, life expectancy of less than 34 years, and with 80% of its people
living on less than US$1 a day, afford such expensive and luxurious life
styles for its judiciary and politicians?
How can government negate the development and poverty alleviation
agenda bequeathed on it by the electorate only yesterday in the harmonised
presidential and parliamentary elections, to concentrate on the leisure
life-styles of its political elite?
These experiences show that, even after the installation of the GNU,
civil society must get ready to fight to put a stop to this soap opera of
"eatertainment", consumerism, and excessive self-indulgence by our
politicians who are clearly living in Cloud cuckoo land. Zimbabweans must
not make the mistake of thinking that the presence of both formations of the
MDC in the GNU will naturally yield a new politics that is people-centred
and development-oriented.
Politicians the world over have a penchant for not only stealing from
the poor and the suffering, but also for doing so with brazen impunity where
civic activism on public policy has died. The proposed US$9 million
expenditure on MPs cars - if indeed it will be effected by government - must
therefore come as a wake-up call to ZCTU, Zimta, PTUZ, ISO and other related
civic groups to reclaim their space in the political landscape of the
country to advocate for the rights of the poor workers and others to a
dignified life.
In fact, the spirit of the talks must have long breathed life into
civil society to remobilise and organise in anticipation of the immediate
and long-term challenges that will be occasioned by the GNU. Without a
strong civil society to play the role of a watchdog on the rebellious and
insatiable appetite of politicians for wealth, Zimbabweans are likely to
drown in the disillusionment akin to that faced by the Zambians under
Fredrick Chiluba who wedded the state and the market forces in an
all-weather union of consumption and self-enrichment by the political and
business elite.
Development and poverty alleviation programmes must not be left only
to the NGOs because the acute state of underdevelopment and economic
collapse in Zimbabwe demands of the government to bear greater
responsibility not only in accountability and transparency, but also in
giving its politicians modest packages that are in line with the economics
of the day.
Across Africa, there is an emerging consciousness especially in
governments that have been through the ravaging experience of conflict to
reduce expenditure on trifles and misplaced priorities of appeasing the
elite. Countries such as Kenya, Tanzania, Rwanda, DRC and even Nigeria have
consistently focused on Small to Medium Scale Enterprises (SMEs) as a way of
empowering their people. These small businesses, which would benefit
immensely from an amount like US$9 million, are certainly not the panacea to
poverty eradication, but do create employment, income and reduced dependence
for citizens.
If the GNU becomes a success, civil society must use the proposed
extravagant parliamentary expenditure as a litmus test of the sincerity and
integrity of Tsvangirai and Mutambara's brand of politics. We must refuse
and denounce more of the same junk politics where politicians outspend
celebrities in ephemeral personal needs that are clearly beyond our national
economic capacity.
For every child that dies of malnutrition in Zimbabwe, for every woman
that dies while giving birth, and for every patient that dies from
preventable diseases, their life will be a big question mark on what
Tsvangirai and Mutambara's politics brought for Zimbabwe's long forgotten
underdogs. The MDC must avoid the risk of jumping into the bandwagon of
splendour, consumption and self-enrichment by forcing government into a
u-turn to focus on rebuilding public infrastructure such as roads, schools,
and hospitals.
Moyo writes from Wales, UK. He can be contacted on email:
lastmoyo@yahoo.com


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Erich Bloch: Sanctions Hurtful To General Public

http://www.thezimbabweindependent.com


Thursday, 11 September 2008 20:02
NONE can credibly condemn the imposition of sanctions targetted
against those who resort to evil, dictatorial domination of others.

None can plausibly argue against sanctions which are designed to
impact upon those devoid of respect for human and property rights, those who
perpetrate or condone genocidal actions, those who abuse positions of power
to pursue self-advantage in blatant disregard for the well-being of those
they are intended to serve.

None can persuasively contend that those who have blatant contempt for
the fundamental precepts of justice, and of law and order, should not be
subjected to appropriately punitive sanctions. None can rationally challenge
the withholding of rights, and the imposition of restrictions by the
international community, upon those who see fit to disregard norms of
international relationships and to abuse fundamental principles of
interaction between the independent states that comprise that international
community.

Thus, the actions by many countries of barring travel to their
countries by Zimbabwean politicians who have seen fit to ignore,
contemptuously, human and property rights, justice, law and order, the
principles of good governance and of genuine democracy, and resort to naught
but endless vituperative, vitriolic outpourings against those that do not
meekly accept those politicians' belief in an omnipotent right to entrench
themselves in near perpetuity, to exercise excessive power over the peoples
that they dominate, cannot reasonably be contested.

There are no sound arguments to support claims that such travel bans
are unjust and "illegal". In like manner, it cannot be rationally claimed
that it is unjust and unlawful for any countries to impose against such
politicians other sanctions, such as barriers upon conduct of economic
transactions in those countries, the operation of banking accounts,
acquisition of properties and other assets, and the like.

However, as justifiable as such targetted sanctions are, sanctions
which afflict the innocent are not only unjustified, but also are often
inhumane and an intensification of the hardships and suffering of the
innocent, being the very people that the sanctions seek to protect.

The first of such inequitable sanctions was limited in extent, being a
bar upon the children of the rightfully targetted from pursuing their
education in the countries wielding such targetted sanctions. In most, if
not all, instances of such children, the affected children were blameless,
their sole connection with perpetration of deeds justifying sanctions being
the accident of birth as descendents of such perpetrators.

And yet, their future, their lives, were unhesitatingly placed in
jeopardy, without consideration, and with blatant disregard for the
longstanding international justice principle of innocent until proven
guilty.

In like manner, some Zimbabweans were subjected to targetted sanctions
solely on the strength of their direct or indirect association with the
deservedly sanctioned, disregarding that some of those so associated were
innocent of the evil machinations of their associates, and often sought
vigorously to dissuade those associates from continuing their unjust
oppression of others, their unlawful retentions and abuse of power, and
their other diabolical misdeeds. Subjecting them to such targetted sanctions
was as unjust as were the acts of those deservedly sanctioned.

Save for the targetted sanctions, Zimbabwe as a whole was not
subjected to international sanctions until recently, even though its
government continuously alleged to the contrary. The only sanctions which
applied to all Zimbabwe, and not only to those deserving to be sanctioned,
were applied by USA, to the extent of its Zimbabwe Democracy Act which,
amongst other provisions, prescribed a veto of any International Monetary
Fund support for Zimbabwe, and of its Africa Growth and Opportunity Act,
Zimbabwe being precluded from access to the favoured nation trade benefits
of that act.

But that is now rapidly changing. Suddenly many of the countries of
the European Union (EU), and some Commonwealth countries, and US, are
resorting to broadbased economic sanctions.

Bank accounts are being frozen, businesses are discontinuing the
supply to, and purchase of goods from, Zimbabwe, international financial
institutions are imposing barriers to transfers of funds to and from
Zimbabwe, including withdrawal of letter of credit, travellers' cheques, and
other facilities and financial instruments, and businesses are being pressed
to disinvest from Zimbabwe.

The tragedy is that these sanctions are not harmful to Zimbabwe's
rulers. These sanctions do not impact significantly upon the political
hierarchy who brazenly tyrannise the Zimbabwean people, in pursuit of their
craving for retention of power and, in some instances, of continuance of
self-enrichment.

They have sufficient friends in those countries (usually also
dictorships) as align themselves with them, reinforced in certain cases by
accumulated resources externally of Zimbabwe, and deviously well-concealed,
to circumvent the impact of sanctions upon themselves.

And, in the rare instances where they are in need of foreign currency
beyond their own massively acquired wealth, they ensure that what little
foreign currency as Zimbabwe still generates is prioritised towards them,
instead of towards meeting essential economic needs.

Instead, those who suffer the consequences of the sanctions are the
very people that the international community wishes to help, being the
general population. The sanctions imposed have lessened the availability of
foreign currency essential for importation of basic commodities, of fuel,
electricity, medication and other healthcare requisites.

As a result, the population suffers the direct consequences of immense
scarcities, which is a major fuellant of inflation (now exceeding 1 200 per
month, and rising). Moreover, the lack of foreign currency is the major
driver of exchange rates within the black market, further intensifying
inflation.

Concurrently, the sanctions are directly and indirectly a further
massive burden upon the survival of businesses and, as a result,
unemployment is intensifying daily.

By now, almost 90% of Zimbabwe's employable population is without
formal sector gainful employment, and over 80% of the population is
struggling to survive on incomes vastly below the poverty datum line.

The majority of the population is undernourished and suffering
pronounced malnutrition, thousands are dying due to that malnutrition,
compounded by an inability to access healthcare, and tens of thousands, if
not more, are homeless. NGOs and humanitarian aid agency food and healthcare
distribution programmes are hindered by their inability to access their own
foreign exchange, which sits in frozen international bank accounts.

The sanctions are counter-productive in the extreme. They do not hurt
the political hierarchy which justly is the target of international
condemnation and ire. They hurt only the innocent populace, while giving
that political hierarchy a fictitious explanation for Zimbabwe's ailing
state, thereby deflecting recognition of their own culpability. The world
needs to find a more constructive way of achieving a just Zimbabwean
governance transformation.


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Muckraker: Lieutva And The Tourism Boom

http://www.thezimbabweindependent.com


Thursday, 11 September 2008 19:58
AN evil spirit has possessed Zimbabwe's retail sector. Consumers have
become its biggest victims of late. Only very tough measures can exorcise
it.

There are so many outrageous prices charged for the same commodity by
different retail outlets that it's hard for the consumer to know what to
pay. And the same item in the same shop can have at least three prices.

Retailers now say they have a "cash" price, a "swipe" price and a
"cheque" price for the same item. Consumers have been phoning with harrowing
tales.

One irate guy says he went into a supermarket where he was told a kg
of chicken cost $1 080. After it was weighed on the scale and found to be
slightly over a kg, the price shot to $1 500.

Fair, so thought the guy. He told them he wanted to use his ATM card,
and he was told he was most welcome. Then the price leaped to $21 500.

Another victim of this extortion wanted to purchase medication for an
ailing mother. He went to a pharmacy and was told he would need to part with
$50 000 for cash. When he said he could not raise that kind of money, he was
offered an alternative. He could "swipe", where upon the price ballooned to
a staggering $200 000.

What exactly are consumers expected to do with daily cash withdrawal
limits set at $500? We know raising this on its own won't help because the
same unscrupulous retailers will just peg their cheapest item on the next
withdrawal limit the following day. Where is the Consumer Council of
Zimbabwe, the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions or the National Incomes and
Pricing Commission?

It is an understatement to say this is daylight robbery. Tough action
is needed yesterday to deal with these robber barons.

Recently Dusty Miller, who covers food, drink and travel for us, wrote
about the upcoming ZTA Travel Expo, mentioning, in passing, he hoped
sponsored buyers and journalists, this time, didn't all come from
Azerbaijan, Armenia, Albania or Anatolia: an alliterative aspiration,
hinting the tourism body seems to spend an awful lot of time and money
attracting, well..not exactly world class players here.

Lo and behold in Monday's Herald of Total Honesty, we see ZTA bossman
Karikoga Kaseke beaming on the front page, welcoming travel writers,
described as "influential media personalities".

Turn to page 2 and read some of them are from Latvia and Lieutva!

Where?

All can be revealed by stamp-collector Muckraker: Lieutva is what
Lithuanians call Lithuania!

Muckraker somehow doubts Zimbabwe will be inundated with travellers
from Lithuania, Latvia or fellow Baltic statelet, Estonia, all fairly
recently freed from the yoke of Soviet communism, after previously being
Nazi puppet states.and communist before that.

Meanwhile The Herald's Saturday city.com issue tells us that Akon
(named by Kaseke as a Zimbabwe tourism ambassador) faces trial in Fishkill,
New York, charged with second degree harassment and endangering the welfare
of a child!

Some ambassador!

Can we expect to see page one pictures of influential media
personalities "jetting in" from Shqiperia as the controversial tourism shop
window in Bulawayo draws closer?

Where?

Shqiperia is what Albanians call Albania!

The special guests from Lieutva, Lithuania and Estonia have been
brought to Zimbabwe courtesy of Kaseke's tourism "post-election perception
management programme". The boss man must however make sure that visitors can
go through immigration at Harare International Airport first before flying
in the holiday-making journos.

On Sunday afternoon travellers from South Africa and Singapore were
treated to a spirited exhibition of inefficiency and sloppiness by airport
staff. For a good 15 minutes passengers shifted from one foot to the other
as they waited for the officers to man their desks and stamp passports.

Eventually two officers started stamping passports but it took more
than an hour to clear passengers from South Africa. Then it took forever for
the baggage claim machine to disgorge bags. This is the picture of Zimbabwe
a number of elderly tourists got on Sunday.

As if aware of Zimbabwe's inadequacies, Kaseke, in a show of bravado,
told the visiting journalists to report truthfully on the situation in the
country. He said he did not expect the reporters to be the country's
"solidarity messengers" when they return to their countries.

"If you see people being strangled to death in the streets of Harare,
or someone being thrown in a crocodile dam in Victoria Falls, please I beg
you to report that without fear because we want the world to know the truth
of the situation here in Zimbabwe," exhorted Kaseke. What hints and news
leads was he sharing with the foreign scribes?

Quite convenient for him to say so now that the bloody elections are
over. But we hope the journalists will take him at his word and report that
inflation is more than 10 million% , the shops are stocked with imported
goods the poor cannot afford, that everyday you run the risk of being
stranded because the country has no fuel and that without foreign currency,
it is nearly impossible to purchase anything on both the formal and informal
market. Thank you Kaseke.

The journalists can also report that it is an offence to go to an
Internet café with foreign currency. The Herald of Monday had a story about
eight Internet foreign currency dealers who had appeared in court charged
with flouting Exchange Control regulations. They were arrested at an
Internet café in the Harare central business district after police were
tipped off about their dealings.

All of them were searched and found in possession of various amounts
of foreign currency. Is it a crime against the law to be found in possession
of foreign currency? In which case every Zimbabwean would almost certainly
be arrested at some point because the rand and the US dollar have become the
most reliable store of value. Who wants to keep Zimbabwe dollars with
inflation at more than 10 million % yet honest citizens can access only $500
a day -- not enough to buy a loaf of bread.

You need four trips to the bank to be able to buy a 1kg of beef at the
cheapest price of $2 000. Let's get serious please. This will definitely
attract visitors from the East.

Not quite as sweet as it sounds. Opposite Kaseke's exhortation was a
sabre-rattling Information permanent secretary George Charamba threatening
to kick International Federation of Journalists secretary-general Aiden
White for interfering in Zimbabwe's domestic affairs. White had attempted,
reports the Herald, to present to government "a draft model law on media
regulation".

Charamba accused White of prejudice because he had met MDC-T
spokesperson and not Tafataona Mahoso of the Media and Information
Commission or officials from the Broadcasting Authority of Zimbabwe.
Charamba felt slighted and flew into a royal rage.

"I also told him he was taking a political position and that I was
ready to kick him out of my office."

That should be wonderful copy for the visiting journalists and a major
drawcard for tourists.

There was good news on agriculture front. The forthcoming season had
"received a double boost", said the Herald, after the meteorological
department "predicted" a normal rainy season and government said it had
acquired adequate inputs for maize production this year. Who wouldn't want
something positive out of this House of Hunger?

But in Zimbabwe you are safe to suspend belief after a bitter
experience with former Agriculture Joseph Made and last year's predicted
"Mother of all Agricultural Seasons". It turned to be a Harvest of Thorns.

MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai has warned he will not be hurried into
signing a bad deal. He told his supporters at a function to mark his party's
9th anniversary in Gweru that they were the "winners" and would rather "not
have a deal than to have a bad deal".

In a reference to the inter-party talks and the unity government,
Tsvangirai complained about being given "responsibility without authority".

He went on: "In any case, the whole issue is not about the signature
of Morgan Tsvangirai, it is about the signature of the people of Zimbabwe
who want food, jobs, better health care and education."

He ended with an enigmatic statement on his signature and why he was
withholding it: "As long as that signature does not unlock the crisis and to
resolve people's expectations, there will not be any deal." Is that what he
really said or was something lost in translation? We don't get it.

The circus around ANC president Jacob Zuma's trial for fraud,
racketeering and corruption is fast getting out of hand, especially since it
was joined by the party's youth militia led by one Julius Malema. The youth
have vowed to "kill for Zuma".

They want all the charges against him dropped; they want him as the
next president, otherwise they will kill someone for it, including judges.

But the madness to subvert justice has also infected the nation's
elders. The Sunday Times reports that the South African Congress of Trade
Unions (Cosatu) has threatened a two-day job stay-away if corruption charges
against Zuma are not dropped today.

Cosatu general-secretary Zwelinzima Vavi said if the charges are not
dropped they will picket National Prosecution Authority offices throughout
the country because they believe their hero will not receive a fair trial.

"We fear what could happen should something happen to him (Zuma),"
Vavi told the Sunday Times. "The belief among workers and South Africans
that the ANC president is a target of machinations runs deep," he said,
without explaining ANC leaders' role in trying to use mob rule to influence
the justice system.

We thought our own Joseph Chinotimba and his gang of thugs had
performed the worst stunts when they invaded the Supreme Court at the height
of land invasions. They have envious admirers across the border.

On the other hand there is growing uneasiness in South Africa about
Zuma's ability to control his gang of often violent supporters. They have
turned into a Frankenstein monster threatening to visit anarchy on the
nation. Even those who chanted his slogans and were ready to give him his
machine gun on the march to Polokwane are now having second thoughts about
the country's president in the making.

We can only say it's been a pretty short honeymoon. As for the ANC
youth league, we need not be surprised by their wayward behaviour. The
second name of its leader sums up everything in Zulu -- idiots.


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Editor's Memo: No Special Favours

http://www.thezimbabweindependent.com


Thursday, 11 September 2008 19:54
OF late we have been flooded by complaints on our coverage of the
current power-sharing talks.

We have always got criticism and protests almost every Friday over
this issue, but the frequency is rising at an alarming rate.

Last week we got a candid and compelling complaint from a
knowledgeable and honest political player who was not pleased with our lead
story.

His charge was simple and straightforward. Paraphrased, it amounted to
saying the way we are covering talks is tantamount to aiding and abetting a
blatant political deception of a gargantuan magnitude by Morgan Tsvangirai.
He felt truth has become the first casualty in these talks. The politician
did not use malicious labels or fume menacingly as some always do. He was
frank and polite.

However, we differed with him. We simply pointed out it's not true we
are by design reporting the talks in aid of a political deception to
conveniently explain away why Tsvangirai had not signed the power-sharing
agreement as his complaint seemed to suggest.

We disagreed on this point because we feel we have been trying hard -
even though it's very difficult in such a politically-polarised society - to
reflect all sides of a convoluted running story.

Complaints always rain on us from Zanu PF, the MDC led by Tsvangirai
and the other faction headed by Arthur Mutambara. The Zanu PF refrain is
that we support the MDC, which is false. Tsvangirai's camp claims we are
sympathetic to Mutambara's faction, also blatantly wrong and the Mutambara
faction alleges we support Tsvangirai's party, which is untrue. Others say
we support Simba Makoni. This is also untruthful.

For the record, the Zimbabwe Independent does not support any
political party. Individuals, including the publisher may, but the newspaper
as an institution does not -- end of story.

In all these assumptions, twisted interpretations or irrational
consistency by some of the complainants, are usually the basis of such
disingenuous conclusions. The under-developed logic applied here especially
by Zanu PF mandarins is that "an enemy of my friend is also my enemy or a
friend of my friend is also my friend".

In Zimbabwe if you criticise Mugabe you are necessarily supposed to be
pro-Tsvangirai, if you criticise Tsvangirai you are pro-Mugabe or
pro-Mutambara and if you criticise Mutambara you are pro-Tsvangirai.

By this warped logic if you are opposed to Mugabe's regime, it means
you are automatically democratic. This is plain nonsense. And most honest
readers would acknowledge as much. In the real world it doesn't work like
that.

For all we care to know, Tsvangirai might turn out to be a dictator
just like Mutambara could be one.

The signs are clear. Unless contained, the MDC factions and their
leaders could easily become authoritarian. Their behaviour and deeds from
time to time suggest this. Apart from that, there are precedents from all
over Africa including here.

Who would have thought in 1980 that Mugabe would end up presiding over
such a repressive corrupt and incompetent regime except those close or
clued-up enough to make an honest and informed assessment?

Despite early signs of autocracy, most people, including the media,
were unwilling or unable to subject Mugabe to elementary democratic scrutiny
and containment. In fact, the media and the population were complicit. He
was given a blank cheque and there we have it now -- reaping what we sowed!

Parties, leaders and their policies must always be put under the
spotlight to ensure accountability and transparency. No leader should be
allowed a free rein or appear to be above criticism.

Our job is to provide the platform for different views. We always want
to ensure that our paper is a market place of ideas, not a propaganda stand
for any party or anyone. We play a watchdog role on society, apart from the
banal function of informing, educating and entertaining.

In the process of doing this, we want to write stories which are
accurate, balanced and truthful. We would love to be objective, but we know
that is largely a myth. Studies have shown this.

Instead of indulging in romantic pursuits, we seek to achieve a
variety of journalism based on fact, fairness, and accuracy to arrive at the
truth.

This is our business. It's an entangling enterprise, but certainly we
do try to stick to our watchdog mandate in a professional and ethical way.

No doubt we have had our own vicissitudes, just like any other media
house. We have made mistakes -- in fact so many of them during the last 12
years of our existence -- but that's part of the learning curve. No matter
what mistakes we make, we however remain committed to professional and
ethical journalism. We will not waver on that.

As such we will not package propaganda as news. We may be found to be
practising political or advocacy journalism in some or most cases.
Fair-minded critics say our coverage slant is more towards advocacy
journalism.

Of course, malicious detractors say we are partisan or we have become
an opposition press. Fair and fine, but we are not and won't be a propaganda
sheet or mouthpiece for anyone.

By Dumisani Muleya


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Candid Comment: My Second Journey To The Hague

http://www.thezimbabweindependent.com


Thursday, 11 September 2008 19:16
LAST week I was critical of those who say Zimbabweans accused of human
rights violations should be taken to The Hague.

I used The Hague in a literal and in a symbolic sense to support my
abiding belief that we are masters of our own destiny.

What other civilised nation sends its citizens to be tried at The
Hague for domestic crimes? How come Pik Botha and Ian Smith, for all their
arrogance in the courts and outside, were never taken to The Hague for their
political crimes?

My position against The Hague is a matter of principle, the same way I
have rejected over-reliance on foreigners to resolve our problems.
Outsourcing solutions to our problems to foreigners leaves us less
empowered. The failure of a political settlement between Zanu PF and the MDC
reflects poorly on us as Zimbabweans, not on Thabo Mbeki, who is a mere
facilitator.

It is us who have to live with the consequences of our political
decisions, not Mbeki or South Africans, much less those further afield who
have the insolence to set preconditions on the outcome of the talks. To me a
facilitator is not a magician to "find" a solution. His function should be
to take us out of the box, to expose us to different perspectives of viewing
the same problem. We must find the solution or fail.

The Hague in other words is invoked to foster and nurture in us a
spirit of contempt and distrust for local initiatives the same way we are
being persuaded that only foreigners know better what is good for our
country. The farther away they are, the better. How can someone who doesn't
understand my language, let alone my culture, resolve my family dispute?

It is in this context that I can't understand how President Mugabe and
Morgan Tsvangirai failed to build on their first one-hour meeting over
dinner after the signing of the MoU in July. In an interview later,
Tsvangirai remarked of Mugabe that "he is a human being after all".

For real statesmen that was the farthest Mbeki could go in getting
these mortal rivals to reassess and re-evaluate each other and decide what
is best for their nation. It was an opportunity to build on, to separate
myth from reality, propaganda from fact and a time to find each other away
from the madding crowds.

Nobody besides the two knows exactly what they discussed in that one
hour meeting in which Tsvangirai says it felt like "a father and son"
reunion. But since then they appear to have drifted further and further
apart, all to the detriment of ordinary Zimbabweans.

I have no doubt that there are many foreign leaders who know more
about what was discussed in that meeting than we do. Political leaders can
go to Sadc, the African Union or the United Nations; there is a limit to
what foreigners can do.

We have washed our dirty linen for so long in public no detergent can
wring any more dirt from it. It's not just about listener fatigue; there are
new problems cropping up around the globe everyday, like in Georgia. Which
means Russia's veto stays and so is China's. Soon we might find ourselves on
the backburner just like the deadly conflict in Iraq or waved off as a lost
cause as has happened with Somalia. The world does not owe us anything to
listen to our tales of woe and disaster forever.

Which is why I believe our political leaders should be reaching out
more towards the "human being-ness" of each other, bridging the divides
among themselves and trying to forge a common national vision. MDC and Zanu
PF supporters are Zimbabwean; which party one wants to belong to is a matter
of envisaged opportunities. It is above all a matter of personal choice. It
doesn't confer on anyone more humaneness.

Instead of which everyday we are told of "hyenas", "vultures",
"vampires", "puppets" and "sellouts". Hate speech directed at political
opponents is seen as virtue. Those who try to see the humanity in their
political opponents are viewed with suspicion as wavering in the faith or
outright sellouts who should be attacked or vilified in turn. We need a
better sense of common purpose, and that we cannot achieve so long as one
half of our people believe the other half belongs to The Hague. We do not
have a political party made up of saints despite all the rhetoric about
people -- it's all about opportunity and self-interest.

lTo those who have been sending me e-mails, let me assure you that I
have been warned by many well-meaning Zimbabweans, some now MDC MPs and
councillors, of the dangers of writing what I write. My riposte is simple: I
write to please neither Zanu PF nor the MDC. I write to please my
conscience; I take full responsibility for all the erroneous judgements I
pass on both. In good conscience, I can state that our people have more in
common and are more united than politicians want us to believe. It is the
politicians who are divided over power.

The main purpose of my writings is that we should instill in our
people the attitude that political rivalry is not about enemies to be
crushed, which often leads to violence. It is about selecting national
leaders. People are killed because of the selfishness and avarice of
politicians.

Let me end with a quotation from Alai Ewing Stevenson who said: "A
free society is one where it is safe to be unpopular."

By Joram Nyathi


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Comment: No Magic Wand

http://www.thezimbabweindependent.com


Thursday, 11 September 2008 19:01
AT the time of the rise in the price of oil early this year, US
President Bush in a Rose Garden session with the media admitted in a rather
disingenuous way that he had no immediate solution to the cost of fuel at
the pump.

"If there was a magic wand to wave, I'd be waving it, of course," he
said. "I think that if there was a magic wand, and say, okay, drop price, I'd
do that. But there is no magic wand to wave right now."

Those looking for immediate answers to the oil price crisis were quick
to pounce on the "no solution" response and pilloried the Bush
administration's energy policy. But the strength of the no solution answer
lay in the honesty of the US government at the time that the issue at stake
was beyond its capacity because of many exogenous factors.

Those entrusted to lead this country out of the current low, including
RBZ governor Gideon Gono would wish that they could wave a magic wand to
deal with multitude of problems plaguing our economy; from hyperinflation,
food shortages, joblessness, corruption and to low productivity.
Unfortunately he can't wave the magic wand to bring change or better still
to just make the last four years of his reign as governor to disappear.

On Wednesday Gono launched three products to allow wholesalers,
retailers and fuel importers to charge in foreign currency. He said the
products were set to enhance foreign currency generation and increase
capacity utilisation on farms and in industry. While the measures evoke the
wow factor, they have no semblance of Houdini's exploits.

To his credit though, the governor has remained consistent in terms of
the basics required to initiate the revival process; increasing the
availability of foreign currency in the formal sector; supply of basic goods
and services and promoting production of commodities through enhanced
capacity utilisation. This seemingly small package of reforms is generally
accepted as the panacea to fighting inflation and reduce poverty. But this
is no walk in the park.

Amid one of the worst economic declines ever recorded in living
memory, policy analysts looking at the situation in this country have oft
promoted a pedantic notion that our problems can be fixed by allowing market
forces to take the place of government controls. Gono responded to calls to
float the currency by liberalising the foreign currency market, which did
not pass for a magical moment. The parallel market is still alive and
thriving.

The semi-dollarisation of the economy announced this week is also a
pressured response to legitimise the use of foreign currency in local
transactions. But this could still be very inadequate; which brings us to
the challenge facing MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai in his proposed capacity
as the handyman to fix this economy and bring about a turnaround.

There is danger in positioning Tsvangirai as the silver bullet to sort
out our problems because he is not, neither can he wave a magic wand.

In his armour though are promises of rescue packages which would start
heading this way once he is given control of government. The novelty he
brings on board also makes him a more trusted change agent than President
Mugabe.

During his campaign for the March polls, he announced a $10 billion
package waiting to be poured into this economy. Recently donors have
advertised various other amounts which they are prepared to release once an
internal settlement has been secured.

Balance-of-payment support is badly needed to give the economy room to
breathe and the funds promised us provide the right tonic.

But the money is not coming immediately. On the day Tsvangirai gets
into office, he will be confronted with the same economic problems which
Gono and successive Finance ministers have laboured to deal with in the past
decade; including the breakdown in amenities and social services. Not only
that; those who have made dishonesty, truancy and corruption a career will
not suddenly repent and follow Tsvangirai. They will put up a fight as they
have done every time new measures have been introduced to fight illegality.

Tsvangirai is well aware of the challenge to hand as he articulated it
Gweru at the weekend.

"You cannot mess yourself and ask me to clean you up and then you want
to dismiss me afterwards. In the same vein, if Mugabe wants me to clean up
the mess, then he has to give me the power," he said.

Unfortunately, Tsvangirai once in office will not be judged by
demonstrating ability to identify and dissect the mess that has been created
by the Zanu PF government. We are going to judge him by his ability to roll
up his sleeves and scrub the floors. The Zanu PF government has failed to do
this; that's why he is needed for the job. He has to achieve it with or
without the billions promised by well-wishers. Failure is not an option.

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