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Zim education slides back to chaos
http://www.zimonline.co.za/
by Nqobizitha Khumalo
Wednesday 16 September 2009
BULAWAYO - Zimbabwe's education
system that had shown signs of recovery is
quickly sliding back to chaos
because of a teachers' strike that has
crippled learning at public schools
that reopened only six months ago after
a new power-sharing government came
into office.
The most crucial and final term of the year began more than
two weeks ago
but there has been very little or no learning taking place at
public schools
after the Zimbabwe Teachers Association (ZIMTA), the largest
of two unions
representing teachers in the country, called a nationwide job
boycott by
teachers to press the coalition government to hike
salaries.
The strike that began slowly when the new term began on
September 2 appeared
to gather pace this week with, for example, nearly 90
percent of public
schools visited by ZimOnline reporters in Bulawayo and
surrounding areas on
Tuesday found with only a few senior teachers present
or no one at all to
teach or supervise children.
Many schoolchildren
could be seen loitering at school grounds or nearby
shopping centres in
scenes reminiscent of 2008 when learners were left on
their own as teachers
went on strike or simply stayed at home because they
could not afford bus
fare to work on their meagre salaries.
Education Minister David Coltart,
who has held several fruitless meetings
with union leaders since the new
term began, told ZimOnline that there was
little he could do to get teachers
back to classrooms, surrendering the task
to the Ministry of Public Service
that employs all government workers.
"The issue of the strike is not with
me anymore," said Coltart, who also
pointed out that the work boycott by
teachers had hit learning at most
schools across the country.
ZIMTA
president Tendai Chikowore said: "The strike is still on . . . the
majority
of our members are not reporting for duty in all provinces across
the
country."
Chikowore, whose ZIMTA has about 40 000 members out of about 90
000 teachers
at schools, said the union would meet next Friday to review the
strike.
Officials from the smaller Progressive Teacher's Union of
Zimbabwe (PTUZ)
were not immediately available for comment on the matter.
The 20 000-member
PTUZ has opposed the strike action although it is unclear
whether the union's
members are actually reporting for work as directed by
their leaders.
Private schools that pay teachers more than public schools
are running
normally across the country.
Zimbabwe's power-sharing
government between Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai
and President Robert
Mugabe has promised to revive the economy and restore
basic services such as
health and education that had virtually collapsed
after years of
recession.
But the failure by the administration- which says it requires
a total US$10
billion to get Zimbabwe back on its feet again - to convince
rich Western
nations to release grants and soft loans has hampered its
ability to sustain
the recovery effort.
The administration that since
its February formation had been paying all its
workers a flat
US$100-allowance per month last July hiked payments to
between $155 and $200
per month depending on grade. Teachers' salaries were
raised to US$150, a
sum they say should be increased to about $500 per
month.
Patrick
Moyo a teacher at a Bulawayo secondary school described his
government
salary as a "waste of time".
Moyo said he was at school to teach students
preparing for their final
public examinations at the end of the year but he
was asking each child to
pay him 20 rands (about US$2.00) to attend
lessons.
He said: "If government will not pay us then the students will
have to pay
for the lessons because we cannot toil for the whole month for
just US$150,
it is waste of time." - ZimOnline
The shocking state of Zim schools
NATIONAL EDUCATION ADVISORY
BOARD
Chairman Dr Isaiah Sibanda
Press Release - 15 September
2009
The National Education Advisory Board, appointed in March this year,
released its "Report on the Rapid Assessment of Primary and Secondary
Education in Zimbabwe" yesterday at a Stakeholders Conference held at Prince
Edward School, Harare. The Assessment was funded by the European Commission,
represented at the launch by Ms Barbara Plinkert, Head of the Social Sector.
This was the first task requested by Minister David Coltart, in order to
have reliable data on which to base the work of reconstruction of the
education sector.
Among other findings in the sample 120 schools
throughout the country, over
20% of primary schools had not a single
textbook for English, Mathematics or
African language - even for the
teacher! Large numbers of pupils in rural
areas had no place to sit or
write. School buildings, teachers' houses,
furniture etc were generally
dilapidated. Many schools had not been visited
for years by Ministry
officials due to lack of resources. Examination
results were generally poor,
teacher morale was low and the relationship
between teachers and parents had
deteriorated.
The Conclusions were as follows:
"The Rapid
Assessment focused on a number of problem areas and challenges
which require
immediate attention. Despite the limitations of a study done
in such a short
space of time, it provided a snapshot of the situation and
the immediate
steps needed to stabilize and improve the situation of
education as a whole.
At the same time, it made clear that a more in-depth
approach is needed in
the longer term. For example major inputs are required
to improve the
condition and morale of teachers who will always remain key
players within
the education system. These include repairing the damaged
status of teachers
and the problematic relationship which has developed
between parents and
teachers due to the fact that parents, including very
poor parents, were
forced by circumstances to take over responsibility for
teachers'
remuneration during the period when the State was unable to
fulfill its
obligations in this regard. The staffing and resourcing of the
MOESAC have
been seriously affected, and need both re-structuring and
updating. The
shortage of resources for the education sector has to be
seriously addressed
and stabilized primarily by the State, assisted by
donors and parents. At
the same time, there has been major erosion of
educational infrastructure
which needs to be addressed. The provision of
teaching learning materials
has deteriorated to the extent that the
industries servicing the education
sector are no longer able to do so
optimally."
The Report includes a
number of recommendations on the way forward, divided
into urgent
recommendations to Ministry not requiring additional expenditure
and those
requiring additional funding, medium-term recommendations to
Ministry and
recommendations to Partners.ENDS
Zimbabwe deal leads to few
changes for pupils
From The Associated Press, 15 September
By Angus Shaw
Highfield - Stinking
waste flows into the yard from the classroom toilets of
B Block. Teachers
hold lessons in the shade of trees outside: Much of the
schoolroom furniture
is piled into heaps of broken wood. Mutasa junior
school was once the pride
of this teeming impoverished township in western
Harare. Now signs in shaky
children's writing on the walls tell visitors:
"No books, no learning; No
table and chair for teacher. Please help." A year
after President Robert
Mugabe signed a power-sharing deal with former
opposition leader Morgan
Tsvangirai, making him prime minister, the children
at Mutasa school have
little to celebrate. "If my parents had money I could
go to a better
school," writes one child in a poem on the bulletin board who
signs himself
off as "Sad Boy." Another child says: "Our naked feet are full
of blisters."
The United Nations children's fund estimates that an average
of 10
Zimbabwean children share a single text book and some schools have no
books
at all. Almost half of junior school children don't go on to senior
school.
In one of the biggest donor programs in the past five years, UNICEF
and
Western donors on Monday unveiled a $70 million program to get children
back
into class. The program aims to provide a text book for every child in
the
country's 5,300 junior schools and will target 700,000 absentee children
from the most impoverished and vulnerable communities.
Education
Minister David Coltart, a former opposition leader, estimates
about $1
billion is needed to rebuild and re-equip schools across Zimbabwe.
"As
shocking as it seems," he said, Mutasa school "is far better off than
many."
Years of political and economic turmoil brought Zimbabwean education
services - once a model in the region - to a near standstill in 2008,
depriving millions of children of schooling. Hundreds of rural schools shut
down as teachers fled assaults and harassment after the disputed March 2008
presidential election that later led to the power-sharing agreement. Many
schools were vandalized and had doors, windows and even roofs stolen,
Coltart said. The upcoming rainy season is expected to disrupt teaching
outdoors. "We have lost a year. If we don't get adequate resources in a year
or two we will have lost a whole generation. This is the tragedy. Our
children should be our absolute priority," Coltart said. Since the coalition
government was formed in February after six months of bickering, teachers
have staged sporadic strikes over pay. "We don't have the money. The
government has a dearth of resources" fueled by international skepticism
over the implementation of the deal, Coltart said.
Joe Mbadzi, an
Highfield councilor for Tsvangirai's Movement for Democratic
Change party,
said that parents of Mutasa school children also battled to
raise money for
fees and top-up "incentives" for teachers. At least 100
pupils dropped out
this term. Mugabe blames Western sanctions for Zimbabwe's
economic meltdown
and insists those measures have blocked national
reconstruction. Western
nations argue that democratic, constitutional and
media reforms promised in
the power-sharing agreement have not gone far
enough for them to restore
traditional ties with the former British colony
Mugabe led to independence
in 1980. "If we are to restore our once fine
education system, we have to
work hard and as a matter of urgency to remove
the skepticism," Coltart
said. A child's drawing pinned up at Mutasa school
shows a teacher with a
down-curled mouth and lists payments for food,
housing and commuter
transport far outstripping his monthly government
salary of $150 - the
reason given officially for teacher absenteeism. "This
is just but
unbearable," the grim-faced teacher in the child's drawing says.
Zanu
PF youth militia assault school teacher
This press release from the ‘Youth Alliance for Democracy’ highlights
typical Zanu PF endorsed violent behaviour courtesy of the youth militia. It is
alarming that this is continuing under the spotlight of the GPA. When will it
stop?
Press Release — Youth Alliance for Democracy is disturbed by the
beating of Duncan Mapasure, a teacher at Mtasa Primary School in Mtasa district,
Manicaland, by ZANU PF youth militias on Friday 11 September 2009. Sources from
the Progressive Teachers Union of Zimbabwe (PTUZ) confirmed the incident citing
that Duncan was severely assaulted for failing to abide to the call by ZIMTA to
embark on strike action in which the ZANU PF backed union is calling for a
salary increment of at least US$540-00 per month.
Speaking on the phone with YAD Media and Communication Officer, Duncan
narrated his ordeal saying
‘I was attending classes on Thursday when they came in a white Mahindra and
demanded that all teachers should stop teaching and stay home until Tsvangirayi
removes sanctions. All teachers then left as the situation was tense. The
following day I went to school to give my pupils a test and it was while I was
invigilating that test that they came and pulled me outside the classroom and
took turns to beating me up accusing me of being a sellout and a puppet of the
West.’
Mr Mapasure sustained serious head injuries and broken right hand.
It is unimaginable that some youths are brainwashed to an extent of demanding
an end to schooling when pupils are eager to learn considering that this is the
last term of the year with life determining exams in a month.
The stance by the European delegation that, Zimbabwe needs to fully implement
the Global Political Agreement, restore the rule of law and respect human rights
first before travel restrictions can be lifted makes sense, considering the
continued human rights abuses in the country. On the other hand the position by
SADC is a mockery to the crisis in Zimbabwe as it only exposes the body’s
allegiance to President Mugabe.
We call upon the people of Zimbabwe to expose any forms of human rights
violations and harassment and resist being used for political expediency.
‘We demand our rights first before you can freely move around the globe’
This entry was posted by Sokwanele on
Wednesday, September 16th, 2009 at 1:22 pm
Mugabe's remarks may fuel violence: Farmers
http://www.zimonline.co.za/
by Own
Correspondent Wednesday 16 September 2009
HARARE - The
Commercial Farmers' Union (CFU) on Tuesday said threats by
President Robert
Mugabe to send police after white farmers who do not
immediately vacate
their land when told to do so by the government could
ignite more violence
against the beleaguered farmers.
Mugabe who was addressing a congress of
his ZANU PF party's youth wing at
the weekend said whites should quickly
move off farms allocated to new black
owners by the government, saying those
who did not would be forcibly driven
off the farms by the police.
The
CFU said Mugabe's utterances would only help to fuel violence by mobs --
many of them members of ZANU PF -- that have continued invading farms across
the country despite formation of a power-sharing government that many
Zimbabweans had hoped would restore law and order on farms to help food
production.
"The speech to the ZANU PF youth may provide fuel for
further politically
motivated violence and disturbances on commercial farms
at a time where
peace and stability are required to ensure confidence and
increased
agricultural production in the current summer cropping season,"
CFU
president Deon Theron said in a statement on Tuesday.
Theron said
white farmers have complied with all regulations and
requirements of the
government's lands ministry, adding that farmers on land
targeted for
acquisition by the state have always applied for permission to
continue
farming as provided for under the law but the government had never
responded
to such applications.
"The CFU and its members have never disputed the
need for genuine land
reform that truly empowers all the people of Zimbabwe,
irrespective of
gender, race, belief or political affiliation and without
destabilising
agricultural production," the CFU leader said.
There
was no immediate reaction to the CFU statement from Mugabe's
office.
Mugabe's chaotic and often violent land reforms that he says were
necessary
to correct a colonial land ownership system that reserved the best
land for
whites and banished blacks to poor soils, are blamed for plunging
Zimbabwe
into food shortages after he failed to support black villagers
resettled on
former white farms with inputs to maintain
production.
Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai who formed a power-sharing
government with
Mugabe following disputed elections last year, has called
for an audit to
establish who owns which land in Zimbabwe before an orderly
land reform
programme can be implemented but Mugabe has in the past accused
the MDC
leader of wishing to return land to former white
owners.
Critics say Mugabe's cronies - and not ordinary peasants -
benefited the
most from farm seizures with some of them ending up with as
many as six
farms each against the government's stated one-man-one-farm
policy.
Government farm seizures, which started in 2000, have resulted in
the
majority of the about 4 500 white farmers being forcibly ejected from
their
properties without being paid compensation for the land, which Mugabe
says
he will not pay because the land was stolen from blacks in the first
place.
The government has compensated some farmers for developments on
the land
such as dams and farm buildings and says it is committed to
compensating all
farmers for such improvements. But farmers say even these
payments are way
below market rates. - ZimOnline
Chiwewe
to expose officials with 10 farms
http://www.thezimbabwetimes.com/?p=22751
September 16, 2009
From Owen
Chikari in Masvingo
MASVINGO - Former Masvingo provincial governor and
resident minister Willard
Chiwewe has threatened to expose certain Zanu-PF
officials, who according to
him, own up to 10 seized commercial farms each,
if he is forced to vacate a
farm which he seized from a black
family.
Chiwewe refuses to vacate Ganyani Farm, a property which he
grabbed three
years ago.
He argues that the move to boot him out of
the property is politically
motivated, saying he is ready to name and shame
senior Zanu-PF officials
involved in land-grabbing scams, some of whom have
now acquired up to 10
farms each.
Chiwewe says he is ready to do
battle with the state in court after the
Masvingo provincial land committee
headed by the current governor Titus
Maluleke ordered him to leave the farm
and pave way for the return of the
Ganyani family.
"I am not going to
leave that farm because the move is political", said
Chiwewe. "I am more
than prepared to name and shame senior Zanu-PF officials
who own as many as
ten farms each and President Robert Mugabe is aware of
this.
"If they
continue to apply pressure on me I am prepared for a fierce court
battle
over this property."
However, Maluleke yesterday said the provincial land
committee would be left
with no option but to seek the assistance of the
police to forcibly evict
the former governor from the farm.
"If he
insists on occupying the farm then we have no option but to seek the
assistance of the police for him to leave", said Maluleke.
Chiwewe
who was the province's shortest serving governor since independence
has
since been ordered to look for an alternative piece of land to graze his
70
herd of cattle after he was told to move out of Ganyani farm.
The
governor grabbed the farm from the Ganyani family arguing that it was
underutilised by them.
The former governor had originally taken over
nearly half of the 3000
hectare farm, leaving the remainder for the Ganyani
family.
Chiwewe had ventured into full time farming on the 1667,5 hectare
property
after he was relieved of his position as governor of the province
last year.
Chiwewe developed an irrigation infrastructure, erected fuel
tanks and
constructed a farm house but the land committee said that he
should be re-
located elsewhere, nevertheless.
The land audit report
revealed that Chiwewe had used his political muscle
to take over the
property and that he had ignored the pleas of the Ganyani
family.
This is not the first time that Chiwewe has been found on the
wrong side of
government policy.
About three years ago soon after his
appointment Chiwewe was quizzed by the
police for allegedly hoarding and
selling government sourced inputs on the
black market.
He was let off
the hook after senior police officers blocked his prosecution
and ordered
him to pay an admission of guilty fine instead.
Just last year Chiwewe
led a farm invasion in Chiredzi. He subsequently
allocated the property to
his daughter.
More
attempts to take telecommunications ministry away from MDC
http://www.swradioafrica.com/
By Lance
Guma
16 September 2009
Information Communication Technology Minister
Nelson Chamisa has told
Newsreel he is surprised at renewed attempts by ZANU
PF to usurp his control
of the telecommunications sector. Last week Chamisa
instructed the state
owned Tel One company to slash it tariffs by 50 percent
to make customers
pay realistic charges. The state controlled broadcaster
ZBC initially ran
the story, quoting Chamisa as giving the directive, but by
late afternoon
instructions had been issued from ZANU PF to have Transport
Minister
Nicholas Goche cited in the report as having given the
directive.
Chamisa told us he worked on the 'position paper' in June this
year and ran
it through his cabinet colleagues for approval. After the
announcement of
the directive this week he said he was surprised to hear his
work being
attributed to someone else. He said initial attempts were made
through
Webster Shamu, the Information and Publicity Minister, to take over
telecommunications from him, but now Transport Minister Nicholas Goche was
leading a new turf war against him. Chamisa says the new tug of war has
taken him by surprise, as he thought the matter had been
resolved.
Earlier this year in February, Chamisa clashed with Shamu after
the ZANU PF
minister attempted to address a meeting of Tel One workers. The
young MDC
minister was at the same meeting and confronted Shamu as to what
capacity he
was using to address the meeting.
Chamisa admitted the
entire fiasco was designed to frustrate him and his
party. Newsreel has been
told the matter will now be referred back again to
the principals of the
unity government, that is Mugabe, Mutambara and
Tsvangirai, to resolve. In
the MDC's complaint to SADC and the African
Union, the dispute over the
functions of the ICT ministry remains an
outstanding issue.
So what
will the MDC do? Chamisa says they have given themselves one month
to
consult their supporters on whether to pull out or remain in the
coalition
government. He conceded the consultation process made them look
indecisive,
but added it was necessary to make the right decision and have
the backing
of the people.
August
inflation slows on lower food prices
http://af.reuters.com/
Wed Sep 16, 2009 8:34am GMT
*
Inflation brakes on lower food costs
* No year-on-year
data
HARARE, Sept 16 (Reuters) - Zimbabwean inflation slowed to
0.4 percent
month-on-month in August from 1.0 percent in July, figures
released by the
Central Statistical Office showed on Wednesday.
The
southern African country had grappled with hyperinflation, prompting a
unity
government formed in February by President Robert Mugabe and his rival
Prime
Minister Morgan Tsvangirai to adopt the use of multiple currencies,
replacing the worthless local unit.
The CSO attributed the slowdown
in August inflation to the lower cost of
food and non-alcoholic
beverages.
The agency, which temporarily halted the release of official
data when
inflation reached 231 million percent in July 2008, currently does
not give
year-on-year inflation statistics.
In July Finance Minister
Tendai Biti said the country was still experiencing
inflationary pressures
from public utility and municipal tariffs, as well as
low production levels,
which averaged 30 percent of total capacity.
(Reporting by Cris Chinaka;
Editing by Chris Pizzey)
MDC
MP Pishai Muchauraya arrested
http://www.swradioafrica.com/
By Violet Gonda
16 August 2009
Pishai
Muchauraya, the MDC-T MP for Makoni South and Manicaland provincial
spokesperson, spent Tuesday night in police custody on charges of assaulting
someone inside a police station. The legislator was arrested when he went to
Mutare Central Police Station with his lawyer, Chris Ndlovu, after the
police issued a man-hunt for his arrest, in connection with an alleged
assault on August 14th.
Muchauraya appeared in court Wednesday and
was released on free bail by
Magistrate Billard Musakwa. He is expected to
appear in court on 28th
September for trial.
The legislator told SW
Radio Africa soon after his release that he is being
victimized and that
some ZANU PF politicians and senior police officers in
Mutare are trying to
silence him. He denies the charge and says the
complainant, Precious
Zinyemba, stole US$12 500 from a friend of his.
He said: "We drove the
accused to the police station to make a report so
that the police would
arrest this thief, but to our surprise the police did
not arrest the thief."
The MP claims some of the officers connived with
Zinyemba to share the money
she allegedly stole, which resulted in
accusations that he assaulted her in
the presence of the police. He denies
the charge.
The outspoken MDC
provincial spokesperson said the case has been heavily
politicized and he
does not believe he will get a fair trial. A statement
issued by the MDC
said two police officers have also been arrested for not
arresting
Muchauraya on the day the crime was committed, and were both made
to pay
fines.
Muchauraya added: "I doubt I will get a fair trial because right
now four
police officers have been charged at Mutare police station for
refusing to
make false testimonies. That is Detective Sergeant Mukwati,
Detective
Chiwari and two others." The MDC said the arrest of the Makoni
South MP is
a clear signal that there is a determination in some people in
the inclusive
government to continue to frustrate and harass MDC MPs, senior
officials and
MDC supporters.
Makoni
on trial for addressing meeting
http://www.thezimbabwetimes.com/?p=22762
September 16, 2009
BINDURA
(Radio VOP) - The trial of Mavambo-Kusile-Dawn (MKD) leader and
losing
presidential candidate in the March 2008 presidential election, Simba
Makoni, was on Tuesday deferred to next month.Makoni faces charges of
allegedly addressing a political meeting without police authority during his
campaigns.
Makoni, who broke away from Zanu-PF early last year to
form a loose
coalition of independent candidates, all of whom lost dismally
against
Zanu-PF and the two Movement for Democratic Change factions, briefly
appeared before a Bindura magistrate but was advised to come back to court
on October 8.
Police re-opened his case in June at a time when Makoni
transformed his
political project into a fully fledged political party. His
trial kicked off
Tuesday in the mining town, 19 months after the alleged
offence.
"The court wants to look at the section of POSA he is being
charged under so
the trial was deferred to 8 October, 2008," said Denford
Magora, the
spokesman for the MKD leader.
During the trial, the
defence raised an objection that Makoni was being
charged under sections of
POSA that no longer existed.
"The mess surrounding this case shows just
how ill-prepared the State is.
They do not even know their own laws and are
seeking to persecute people
under sections that do not exist," said
Magora.
Makoni now claims his trial was violating his freedom of speech,
assembly
and movement.
Makoni is charged under the notorious Public
Order and Security Act (POSA),
a piece of legislation human rights activists
claim is draconian and is
allegedly being used by the state to persecute
perceived opponents.
Court papers at hand show that the charges against
him stemmed from a
meeting attended by about 400 people and addressed by the
former Finance
Minister on March 5 last year, in the run-up to the
controversial
presidential elections.
The state has lined up two
Zanu- PF members and councillors Henry Magundani
and Tendai Kuzvidza and
four police officers stationed at Glendale Police
Station, namely Albert
Chifamba, Johane Chimbari, Oddington Chonze and Jacob
Pedzai, to testify
against Makoni.
Emmanuel Muchenga, who has handled several cases
involving MDC officials and
activists, including the party's deputy minister
for agriculture designate
Roy Bennett in Mutare, will prosecute the matter
when the trial finally
opens.
The state says Makoni organised the
public gathering without giving due
notice to the police as required under a
certain clause in POSA.
He allegedly sent a team to advertise the
political gathering using a loud
hailer and about 400 people responded and
gathered at Tsungubvi Bus Terminus
in Glendale.
The state says
further that Makoni later arrived at the sceneand addressed
the gathering
for about 10 minutes using the same loud-hailer.
The former executive
secretary of Southern African Development Community
(SADC) officially
launched his long-awaited opposition party,
Mavambo-Kusile-Dawn (MKD) in
July this year with promises of delivering real
change to the
country.
In the controversial March 2008 election, in which he was
supported and
endorsed by the Arthur Mutambara led smaller faction of the
MDC, Makoni
polled slightly over eight percent of the vote while President
Mugabe and
Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai respectively garnered 43 percent
and 48
percent respectively of the votes cast.
Makoni's party has
since split with a rival group forming its own break-away
faction, citing
allegations of corruption.
Moyo
calls MDC leaders "blithering idiots"
http://www.thezimbabwetimes.com/?p=22737
September 16,
2009
By Raymond Maingire
HARARE - Former Information
Minister and independent legislator for
Tsholotsho North Jonathan Moyo has
branded the mainstream MDC politicians
"blithering idiots" for claiming they
helped him secure his parliamentary
seat during the March 2008
elections.
The MDC says it entered into a gentlemen's agreement with Moyo
by not
fielding a candidate in that constituency.
The MDC says the
move was intended to deny archrival Zanu-PF what appeared
to be an imminent
victory in a constituency where its (MDC)
splinter faction led by Deputy
Prime Minster Arthur Mutambara was equally
strong.
"Those who say
that are blithering idiots," Moyo told the Zimbabwe Times
Monday when asked
to comment if recent press reports he had
applied to rejoin Zanu PF were
true.
Moyo refused completely to discuss the subject, preferring to
concentrate on
the claims by Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai led
MDC.
"I never entered into any agreement with anyone. That's rubbish.
They took
their own decision," Moyo said.
"They did not put a
candidate in Tsholotsho North, yes. But they went on not
to put a candidate
in Tsholotsho South. Are they trying to say
they were also helping me by not
putting a candidate next door?
"Common sense says you must assist
yourself first before you can think of
assisting any other
person.
"Who told them they have supporters in Tsholotsho? There is no
evidence at
all that they had any votes in Tsholotsho.
"To explain my
point, Tsvangirai fielded candidates for a senatorial seat in
Tsholotsho and
rural councils who all did dismally."
Moyo says by not fielding a
candidate in his constituency, the MDC actually
denied him the pleasure of
registering a resounding victory.
"I actually wish they had put a
candidate in Tsholotsho North because the
candidate for MDC-M who really
gave me a good run for my money
came close to me after benefiting a lot from
the MDC-Tsvangirai's votes as
there was no other MDC they could vote
for."
Moyo said the Tsvangirai led MDC would have suffered a huge
embarrassment of
becoming last if it had fielded a candidate in
the
constituency.
Moyo received 3 532 votes, defeating Mgezelwa Ncube
the candidate of the
Arthur Mutambara faction of the MDC and Zanu-PF's Alice
Dube who garnered 3
305 and 2 085 votes, respectively.
Moyo refused
point-blank to discuss his reapplication to rejoin Zanu PF, a
party he
departed from ignominiously after defying a leadership directive he
should
not contest the same Tsholotsho seat in 2005.
"As a matter of principle,
I don't comment on what other people say," he
said.
"I am no the one
who has said it. Call the Zimbabwe Independent (newspaper)
and ask if it is
true.
"I will not dignify somebody's story. You journalists start
something and
think we have a burden to explain it."
Zanu-PF chairman
John Nkomo confirmed on Thursday, September 10, that Moyo
had submitted his
letter to the party's secretary for administration Didymus
Mutasa.
Moyo had been writing long articles in the state media in
which he viciously
attacked both MDC parties and showered President Robert
Mugabe and Zanu-PF
with praise.
"Yes, he wrote to VaMutasa three
weeks ago after Vice President Msika's
funeral," Nkomo said.
He said
Moyo's application would then be presented to the Zanu-PF politburo,
which
in turn would refer it to him as party chairman and head of the party's
disciplinary committee.
But even as Moyo refused to comment on his
application, the State-controlled
Herald newspaper, which is privileged with
both government and Zanu-PF
confidential information, reported that the
politburo would discuss Moyo's
possible readmission at its next
meeting.
Zanu-PF secretary for administration, Didymus Mutasa described
Moyo as an
"important asset" to the party.
"I do not think it is
necessary for the politburo to punish people like him.
It (the politburo) is
not there to humiliate Cde Moyo," Mutasa said.
Mutasa said the politburo
should "show gratitude for the good work Prof Moyo
did during his time in
Government and Zanu-PF".
Mutasa confirmed receipt of the letter from Moyo
seeking readmission into
Zanu-PF adding that the author of the repressive
media law "did not quit
Zanu-PF of his own volition".
During his term
as Information Minister, Moyo banned four newspapers which
were viewed as
critical of President Robert Mugabe.
"I have got the letter," Mutasa
said. "I personally regard it highly. It is
noble for him to have applied to
rejoin the party.
"A lot of things were happening that were not pleasing
to him. The fact that
he has seen it good to re-apply and join the party
makes me very pleased.
"The resources of the party and its investment are
in the people. In
Jonathan Moyo I find a very good and important investment
for the party,"
Mutasa said. "He is a very good information person. He
showed this during
the time he was Minister of Information. I would not like
to lose people
like him."
Moyo defended his recent newspaper articles
where he continues to criticise
Tsvangirai and his MDC.
In his latest
article, Moyo claims the MDC leader was running a parallel
government by
paying his workers in government higher salaries than the
rest.
He
says he was "exercising my freedom of expression to hold to scrutiny "
someone who "lies" by claiming he is the head of government and yet refuses
to take responsibility for the failure of the same government's
programmes.
Moyo, who has also criticised Mutambara, says he would not do
the same to
President Robert Mugabe.
Mugabe also claims he is the
head of government, among other titles that the
State media now routinely
piles on him.
"I am exercising my freedom of expression," he said, "I
must not do what you
want. I must do what I want and I am entitled to do
that. If that does not
please you, too bad! That is what freedom of
expression is."
Moyo denied claims he had filed a court challenge against
MDC MP Lovemore
Moyo's election as Speaker of the House of Assembly last
year on behalf of
Zanu-PF.
"I am doing it on behalf of Zimbabweans,
who include both Zanu-PF and MDC. I
am dong it in the interest of the rule
of law which you journalists and your
MDC say you believe in. And that rule
of law does not discriminate between
MDC or Zanu-PF.
"It is in the
interest of the rule of law that the conduct of the election
of Speaker
which is a constitutional office is done in terms of the
constitution, the
laws of Zimbabwe and the standing orders of Parliament.
"I have the right
to seek redress in a court of law. I never went to a
militia or anybody else
to seek redress. I never beat up Mr Moyo. I simply
went to a court of law
and paid money to my lawyer and I think only idiots
would find something
wrong with that."
Asked if he would proceed to also challenge the
election of President Mugabe
last year, which was even more controversial
and was condemned by the
international community after over 200 supporters
of Tsvangirai's MDC were
left dead.
"Why did you not challenge it
yourself because you are so eloquent about
it?," Moyo said.
"Why
should I be the one who is carrying your burden? Am I your
representative?
You are the ones who describe the election as having been
flawed and mired
in controversy. I would respect you for challenging that in
a court of law
in the same way I challenged Moyo's election.
"But it is not my duty to
go about challenging all elections as if I am a
fool. I am not a fool."
Chinamasa criticised for attack on SADC tribunal
AFRICAN BAR ASSOCIATIONS
AND RULE OF LAW INSTITUTIONS ARUSHA COMMUNIQUE
THE REPRESENTATIVES OF THE
PREMIER REGIONAL BAR ASSOCIATIONS AND RULE OF LAW
INSTITUTIONS ON THE
AFRICAN CONTINENT, GATHERED IN ARUSHA, TANZANIA ON 15
AND 16 SEPTEMBER 2009
TO AMONG OTHER THINGS REFLECT ON THE STATE OF THE RULE
OF LAW IN AFRICA AND
THE CURRENT STATE OF REGIONAL AND SUB-REGIONAL JUDICIAL
ORGANS HAVE MADE AND
ADOPTED THE FOLLOWING COMMUNIQUE:
Reaffirming that the observance of
human rights, good governance and the
Rule of Law are indispensible
requirements for the greater democratisation
of the African
Continent;
Mindful that these are dependent on the existence of independent,
impartial
and effective institutions that deliver justice without fear or
favour;
Acknowledging that in a significant number of African countries the
Rule of
Law has entrenched itself and judicial institutions operate without
interference from any quarters;
Wary that some African countries have
depicted a tendency to undermine
judicial authority at both the domestic and
regional levels;
ON THE SADC TRIBUNAL
THE REPRESENTATIVES OF REGIONAL
BAR ASSOCIATIONS AND RULE OF LAW
INSTITUTIONS
1. Observed with alarm the
current efforts of the government of Zimbabwe
through the Minister of
Justice and Legal Affairs of Zimbabwe, Honourable
Patrick Chinamasa, to
cause SADC to dismantle a sub-regional judicial
organ - the SADC Tribunal -
on his perceptions relating to non-ratification
and the implications
thereof.
2. Are not convinced by the official reasons, which the Minister has
raised
to justify his decision. They observed among others that:
a. The
establishment of the SADC Tribunal needs no ratification.
b. The Zimbabwean
Government nominated a judge to sit as a Member of the
Tribunal. Other SADC
states have also nominated judges to constitute a full
complement of
Tribunal judges.
c. The Government of Zimbabwe has appeared before the
Tribunal in more than
one case, and has at no time raised objections to its
legality and/or
legitimacy.
d. The Government of Zimbabwe is only
challenging the Tribunal as a result
of it being referred to the SADC Heads
of State and Government to explain
its non-compliance with binding decisions
of this sub-regional judicial
organ.
e. The failure of the Government of
Zimbabwe to comply with a court
decision, whether of a domestic or
international tribunal, is consistent
with its endemic culture of defiance
of court orders that it dislikes.
f. In Zimbabwe the Government dismantled
the Supreme Court and the High
Court when they were seen as issuing
decisions which the Government disliked
through forcing out judges and
hiring "politically correct" individuals. Its
current thrust to destroy the
SADC judicial organ is consistent with the
Government's conduct in dealing
with judicial organs that it dislikes.
3. There have been suggestions that
the SADC Ministers of Justice and
Attorneys General will meet shortly to
decide the fate of the SADC Tribunal.
Attention must be drawn to the fact
that the jurisdiction of the Ministers
of Justice (as extensions of
executives) to consider this matter is
irregular, as this potentially
amounts to an assault on the principle of
separation of powers. It is an
established principle of international law
that the Tribunal, as the
judicial organ itself - and not the executive
organ constituted by ministers
- must be the ultimate judge of its own
jurisdiction.
THE
REPRESENTATIVES OF REGIONAL BAR ASSOCIATIONS AND RULE OF LAW
INSTITUTIONS
THEREFORE IMPLORE THE SADC AND THE AU TO
1. Encourage the government of
Zimbabwe to comply with the decisions of the
SADC Tribunal rather than to
use disingenuous and convoluted legal arguments
to destroy the Tribunal, in
an apparent quest to avoid submitting to the
rule of law.
2. Strengthen
and defend its institutions of justice when they make
decisions, which are
within their competencies. Failure by the SADC and AU
leadership to
vigorously defend regional and sub-regional judicial organs
from such a
blatant assault is likely to have a contagion effect throughout
the
continent which is so desperate for strong institutions of democracy and
rule of law to protect the rights of the people, assure investors of the
sanctity of contract and availability of credible enforcement mechanisms,
and generally promote socio-economic development on the continent.
ON
THE UNICTR ARCHIVES IN AFRICA
THE REPRESENTATIVES OF REGIONAL BAR
ASSOCIATIONS AND RULE OF LAW
INSTITUTIONS
1. Observed that the
substantial archives in respect of the Rwanda Genocide
are part and parcel
of Rwanda's and Africa's history and heritage. The AU
and the UN are
therefore implored to work together to ensure that the UNICTR
archives are
retained and stored in Africa, with appropriate levels of
access for
citizens, researchers, scholars and others.
ON THE ESTABLISHMENT OF A FORUM
FOR AFRICAN REGIONAL LAWYERS ASSOCIATIONS
(FARLA)
The leadership of the
representatives of regional bar associations and rule
of law institutions
welcomed the establishment of this forum and committed
to continue working
together and deepen collaboration on strengthening of
the rule of law in
Africa through this forum.
Done and signed at Arusha, Tanzania, this 16th
September 2009.
_________________________________
EAST AFRICA LAW
SOCIETY (EALS)
__________________________________
SOUTHERN AFRICA
DEVELOPMENT COMMUNITY LAWYERS ASSOCIATION
(SADCLA)
____________________________________
WEST AFRICAN BAR
ASSOCIATION (WABA)
_____________________________________
PAN-AFRICAN
LAWYERS' UNION
(PALU)
_______________________________________
COALITION FOR AN
EFFECTIVE AFRICAN COURT ON HUMAN AND PEOPLES' RIGHTS
(CEAC)
________________________________________
AFRICAN REGIONAL FORUM
OF THE INTERNATIONAL BAR ASSOCIATION
(AfrIBA)
____________________________________
INTERNATIONAL COMMISSION
OF JURISTS (ICJ)
Army
commander declares war on private radio stations
http://www.swradioafrica.com/
By Violet Gonda
16
September 2008
There are two main excuses that ZANU PF has been using as
reasons that the
Global Political Agreement has not been fully implemented -
the issue of the
'sanctions' and the so-called 'pirate' radio stations
broadcasting into
Zimbabwe. The regime's public criticism of 'pirate'
stations has become
more vocal of late, and even senior army senior army
chiefs are accusing the
stations such as SW Radio Africa and Studio 7 of
treason, through their
"asymmetrical warfare".
Lieutenant-General Phillip
Valerio Sibanda, the Commander of the Zimbabwe
National Army, told a study
seminar of army officers in Harare on Monday
that foreign-based radio
stations are at 'war with Zimbabwe' and told the
soldiers to remain on guard
against such things.
He was addressing soldiers attending a five day seminar
on 'low intensity
operations and asymmetric warfare' at 2 Infantry Brigade
Headquarters in
Harare on Monday.
Online blogger Denford Magora quotes
the army chief as saying: "Our country
is undergoing asymmetric type of war
where all means are used to achieve set
objectives by our detractors.
Zimbabweans must be aware and clearly
understand that war is not only about
guns and bullets. Zimbabwe's
detractors are using some NGOs and pirate radio
stations to spread false and
hate messages that will lead to rioting,
despondency and eventually cause
war."
The Zimbabwe Times newspaper
reports Sibanda saying it was imperative for
army officers to be on guard
and equip themselves with knowledge of
different types of warfare that can
be waged against a country by its
enemies. The general accused foreign
governments of funding this 'campaign'
to reverse Mugabe's land reform
programme.
Another army official, Brigadier General Douglas Nyikayaramba,
said: "There
are so many instruments which are used in asymmetric warfare
and we, as the
Two Brigade, were tasked to equip our army officers with
knowledge so that
they do not only protect the country with
guns."
Journalist Angus Shaw said this is part of the new scenario where ZANU
PF is
trying to find blame for the non-implementation of the GPA. He said
although Sibanda is generally considered a 'moderate man,' his latest
statements show that he is now parroting what people are saying within the
higher echelons of ZANU PF.
Observers say the regime's extreme
opposition to private radio stations
shows that they understand how
important radio is for providing access to
independent news and information
to all Zimbabweans. It also indicates
they have no interest in freeing the
media and that the only media they want
is one that they can completely
control, such as the ZBC and the Herald.
Shaw also said ordinary
Zimbabweans are hungry for proper information and
are frustrated with the
subversion of the state media. The journalist said:
"There is nothing but
hate speech on the ZANU PF controlled media and there
is now a smoke and
mirror situation where just like the sanctions issue,
they are trying to
find excuses about why they haven't moved forward with
the constitution
commission, media reforms and democratic reforms in
general, plus the
restoration of law and order."
Zimbabweans Blame Mugabe Over Unity Government Stalemate
http://www.voanews.com/
By Peter
Clottey
16 September 2009
Zimbabweans say President
Robert Mugabe and his ZANU-PF party are to blame
for the ongoing stalemate
in the country's coalition government.
They are accusing the embattled
leader of refusing to fully implement the
Global Political Agreement which
led to the formation of the coalition
government.
But President
Mugabe has said there are no sticking points in the agreement
which threaten
to unravel the government's unity.
Rather he blames the international
community for imposing sanctions, which
he claims hinder the functioning of
the government.
Glen Mpani, a Zimbabwean political analyst said that
President Mugabe is
good at shifting blame.
"It is a statement that
does not reflect reality that is there between the
three political parties.
Because if two of the principals are mentioning
that there are outstanding
issues that need to be resolved, I don't think
that it is his (Mugabe)
responsibility. to justify whether there are
disagreements or not in the
agreement," said Mpani, a Zimbabwean political
analyst.
He said the
sticking point of the agreement was dealt with during a regional
summit.
"It was in essence agreed that the inclusive government was
going to deal
with the issue of the governor, the issue of the attorney
general and the
issues of other appointments that were supposed to be taking
place," he
said.
Mpani said there are indications that Mr. Mugabe is
not serious about the
unity government.
"For him (Mugabe) to say that
there are no other sticking points, I think he
is simply politicking. It
does not reflect the spirit of ensuring that they
are working in an
inclusive government," Mpani said.
Embattled President Mugabe maintains
that he is working with the former
opposition Movement for Democratic Change
(MDC) in a unity government to
resolve the ongoing crisis.
But Mpani
said Mr. Mugabe and his ZANU-PF party have often undermined
elections in the
country.
"We have an election where we did not get a conclusion in terms
of the will
of the people of Zimbabwe," Mpani said.
He said Mugabe
often plays the victim by claiming the sanctions hinder the
functioning of
the coalition government.
"One of the ways in which ZANU-PF has been able
to deal with sanctions is to
construe them as having been imposed on them
because of the MDC. And I think
we have to be careful not to allow the
propaganda that he (Mugabe ) has been
associated with the issue of sanctions
to be perpetuated," he said.
Mpani said there is need to holistically
examine the usefulness of the
sanctions.
"It is very important and
critical for Zimbabweans internally and externally
to critically assess the
role of the sanctions. What have they done, what
have been their impact, are
they assisting in unlocking the crisis in
Zimbabwe?" Mpani asked.
He
said the Southern African Development Community (SADC) has not done
enough
to ensure Mugabe fully implement the agreement that led to the
formation of
the unity government.
MDC
MPs Fed Up
http://www.radiovop.com
MASVINGO- September 16, 2009- Movement for Democratic Change
(MDC)
legislators said on Tuesday they had lost faith in the six month old
but
shaky Global Political Agreement (GPA) and are beginning to campaign for
fresh elections.
The GPA signed by MDC leaders Morgan
Tsvangirai and Authur Mutambara
as well as ZANU PF's Robert Mugabe is under
threat due to disagreements in
implementation.
The
provincial party spokesperson and Member of Parliament for
Masvingo Urban
constituency ,who is also the chairman for Standing Rules and
Orders
Committee (SROC), Tongai Matutu, told RadioVOP that they had resolved
to
holding fresh campaigns after discovering that 'Mugabe is refusing to
consider their issues'.
"All MDC-T legislators from
Masvingo have met today in a caucus
meeting and they agreed to start
campaigns from Mwenezi- the district which
is popularly known for its dire
support for the once ruling party Zanu PF.
"We have nothing
to hide here; Mugabe is being notorious by refusing
to consider our issues.
He has stretched our patients too far; we can not
wait while he continues to
take us like his children. We are not interested
in this game anymore," he
said. "Masvingo has lost faith in this animal
called GPA, its better we
think for another way to fully liberate the people
from Mugabe dictatorship.
We are preparing people for yet another election
because there is no where
we can go with Mugabe blocking all developmental
initiatives."
"We are starting with Mwenezi tomorrow.
We shall talk to villagers in
Mwenezi East and all MPs and party provincial
executive members will be
talking to people. On Wednesday alone we shall
have at least nine rallies in
Mwenezi. I will promise you that we are not
joking, this is a beginning of a
new era," said Matutu.
Speaking on the issue of consulting the public on whether they still
want
the inclusive government, Matutu said there was no doubt that the
people of
Masvingo were 'exhausted'.
"What else can people do to show
that they are fed up. We are going to
carry a survey but for sure the people
here are exhausted. Mugabe has let
the whole deal down. We want to see
progress but if all the outstanding
issues are not being addressed then why
should we try to solemnise this
marriage. Masvingo is prepared to walk
out."
Meanwhile a Minister responsible for National
Healing under the
Mutambara led MDC, Gibson Sibanda, said he had since
learnt that Zanu PF
and Mugabe never honoured
agreements.
Speaking at a one-day workshop on national
reconciliation workshop
held in Masvingo, Sibanda said: "PF ZAPU and ZANU
established a unity
government after the violence that erupted in
Matebeleland, to be known as
the Gukurahundi massacres. Many people lost
their lives, and I lost several
relatives. The two parties merged to form
one party-ZANU PF. But Mugabe
failed to honour the agreement, leading to the
swallowing of PF ZAPU."
"Then came the MDC, and again that
violence started. All this time
there was violence, injury and loss of life.
Since 2000, all the elections
were marred by bloodshed. And now Mugabe
appears as if he made a compromise,
but again he is defaulting," said
Sibanda.
Zimbabwe Will Use Recent IMF Loan for Infrastructure
http://www.voanews.com
By Peta
Thornycroft
Southern Africa
16 September
2009
Zimbabwe Finance Minister Tendai Biti says the hundreds of
millions of
dollars pledged by the International Monetary Fund earlier this
month will
be used to rebuild the country's infrastructure.
Earlier
this month, Central Bank Governor Gideon Gono made a statement
through the
partisan public media saying Zimbabwe had been awarded $500
million from the
International Monetary Fund.
The IMF said the money, in the form of
special drawing rights that have to
be sold to turn it into cash, was
allocated to Zimbabwe and 185 other IMF
countries in a one-time loan to help
them cope with the world recession.
Finance Minister Tendai Biti says he
is in close contact continuously with
the IMF, and after consultations has
decided that as bilateral aid is not
forthcoming, he will use the IMF money
to rebuild schools, hospitals, roads,
railways and
communications.
Since becoming the unity government finance minister,
Biti has eliminated
the Zimbabwe dollar and introduced U.S. dollars and the
South African rand
to stabilize the economy.
In an interview in a
weekly newsletter published by the unity government's
prime minister, Morgan
Tsvangirai, Biti hinted at tension between himself
and Gono. In a clear
reference to the financial chaos of the previous
ZANU-PF administration he
said Zimbabwe's era of what he called 'Zombie'
economics were over, as was
the "era of of the state acting as the arena for
personal
enrichment."
He described the previous administration as a "kleptocracy"
and said he
would ensure the IMF's once-time award was used for the benefit
of the
people as a whole and not individuals.
Gono, who has been
widely accused of usurping the finance ministry's powers
before the
inclusive government was sworn into power in February, was
responsible for
the printing of large amounts of money and triggering the
record-breaking
inflation that crippled the economy last year.
In his interview Finance
Minister Biti painted a grim picture of the
Zimbabwe economy, saying it has
a debt of $5 billion, of which the central
bank debt is $1
billion.
He said the national debt, inherited by the inclusive
government, as a
percentage of gross domestic product was more than 150
percent and that this
debt was two-and-one-half times greater than the value
of Zimbabwe's total
exports. He said Zimbabwe's indebtedness, including
current arrears, which
he said were a result of previous economic
mismanagement, prevented Zimbabwe
from accessing cheap loans from
institutions like the World Bank.
Western countries have said they will
only provide development aid when the
year-old political agreement signed by
Mr. Mugabe and Mr. Tsvangirai is
fully implemented.
Zimbabwe has
received more than a $1-billion in humanitarian aid since the
economic
crisis began in earnest in 2000.
The IMF says another $10 million was
awarded to Zimbabwe, but is being held
back until it clears $140 million in
current arrears to the fund.
Investors make tentative return to Zimbabwe
The imposing façade is freshly painted, the hardwood floors and panelling are
repaired and polished and the oil portraits of Cecil Rhodes, founder of colonial
Rhodesia, dusted off. The Bulawayo Club, preserve of the white elite in
pre-independence Zimbabwe, has become an unlikely beneficiary of the country’s
stuttering economic recovery.
Although foreign investors are still wary of Zimbabwe’s continuing political
uncertainty, local businesses, such as Amalinda Collection, the local tourist
group behind the club’s refurbishment, are starting to commit capital. Phil
Stead, managing director of Amalinda, says: “It is going to happen. If you have
a good product you can make money here.”
Zimbabwe’s
seven-month-old coalition government – in which Robert Mugabe’s Zanu-PF and
Morgan Tsvangirai’s Movement for Democratic Change are sharing power after a
disputed general election – may still be fractious, but entrepreneurs such as Mr
Stead are betting that the political settlement and currency stability –
achieved when the local dollar was replaced by the US dollar and South African
rand – have changed things fundamentally.
Amalinda, which also owns two safari lodges, negotiated a lease to manage the
114-year-old gentlemen’s club in Bulawayo this year and are planning to manage
it like a conventional hotel. Some $180,000 (€123,000, £109,000) has been
invested; more will follow.
“The bottom fell out of this [tourism] market in a heartbeat at the end of
the 1990s and it could recover just as quickly,” says Mr Stead. Recent weeks, he
says, have been encouraging, with adventurous US tourists, mining company
executives and European diplomats among those staying at the club.
|
The
Bulawayo Club (above) is an unlikely beneficiary of the country’s stuttering
recovery |
Greater price stability and the opening of credit lines from South Africa are
also presenting opportunities in other sectors. In a small town near Harare, an
engineer, still too nervous to offer his name, recently returned with his family
from abroad to invest tens of thousands in a cross-border business supplying
imported merchandise.
“There is no way I would be back without these changes,” he says. “You know
that when you wake up your money will have the same value as it had the night
before. I know now I can go to the supermarket and buy milk and cereal for the
kids.”
The government is hoping this sense of opportunity will soon lure significant
foreign investment, helping to exploit economically pivotal reserves of gold,
platinum, chromium and diamonds. Both Mr Mugabe and Mr Tsvangirai were expected
to address an event billed as the country’s biggest mining conference in Harare
on Wednesday.
So far, though, investors themselves are cautious. At the Harare Stock
Exchange, which reopened seven months ago, share prices have moved sideways,
with as many investors choosing to realise gains as to take fresh positions.
In the real economy, foreign businessmen are still concerned about
restrictions and legal confusion. Vaguely worded indigenisation laws mean that
foreign investors must cede a controlling stake to black empowerment groups.
Change has been promised, with new mining legislation apparently under
consideration. But for the moment groups such as South Africa’s Impala Platinum, already the biggest investor in
Zimbabwean mining, are leaving multi-million-dollar investment plans on
hold.
In spite of dollarisation, exchange controls remain on the statute book and
Gideon Gono, the Zanu-PF politician who presided over the monetary chaos that
led to Zimbabwe’s hyperinflation, is still governor of the central bank. A
long-awaited investment treaty with South Africa has still to be approved.
The occupations of commercial farms owned by white farmers – which have
continued since Mr Tsvangirai was inaugurated as prime minister in February – do
not help business confidence. And as Sean Gammon of Imara, a pan-African
financial group, puts it: “There is still unease about the politics generally
and how sustainable all this is.”
Zimbabwe finmin
says blocked possible IMF aid abuse
http://af.reuters.com
Wed Sep 16, 2009 4:51pm GMT
By
Cris Chinaka
HARARE (Reuters) - Zimbabwe's Finance Minister Tendai Biti
said on Wednesday
he had blocked possible "unprocedural use" of IMF aid
allocated to the
country under a global assistance agreement for member
states hit by a
global crisis.
Biti dismissed as "rubbish" reports in
state media that he had written to
the International Monetary Fund
effectively rejecting over $500 million in
IMF special drawing rights
extended to Zimbabwe because Harare has external
debts of about $5.7
billion.
"That is rubbish. I did not block (the aid)," he told a news
conference he
called to address what he termed unjustified excitement over
the IMF
allocation.
"What I blocked are efforts to unprocedurally
convert and to liquidate the
SDRs into cash," Biti charged. But he refused
to name the culprits.
Biti, a senior figure of the Movement for
Democratic Change opposed to
President Robert Mugabe's ZANU-PF party, has
been fighting a bitter turf war
with the president's allies, especially
central bank Governor Gideon Gono,
since the MDC joined ZANU-PF in a
power-sharing government in February.
The IMF said on September 4 that it
had transferred around $400 million in
IMF special drawing rights to
Zimbabwe under a $250 billion agreement to
bolster the reserves of the
fund's 186 member countries.
The fund said however it would withhold
another $102 million of Zimbabwe's
allocation by placing it in escrow until
the country had cleared its $140
million IMF debt.
Biti said on
Wednesday it was common knowledge that Zimbabwe was broke and
had no foreign
reserves, and that the economy was struggling to get off the
ground after a
decade in crisis.
"This is the net position of Zimbabwe ... and so we
have to use any money
that we get very carefully, under a proper fiscal
plan," he said.
Biti said he was recommending that the government uses
the IMF allocation
mainly to rehabilitate Zimbabwe's dilapidated
infrastructure, including
roads, water resources, phone and electricity
network.
Zimbabwe has suffered a decade of economic meltdown, worsened by
the
withdrawal of Western funding over policy differences with Mugabe's
previous
administration, before he formed the unity government with rival
MDC leader
Morgan Tsvangirai, now prime minister.
Zimbabwe set to
double maize harvest -finmin
http://af.reuters.com
Wed Sep 16, 2009 3:23pm GMT
*
Previous season harvest was 1.2 million tonnes
* Finance minister says
preparations for harvest better
* Analysts say 2.5 million T maize output
target unlikely
By MacDonald Dzirutwe
HARARE, Sept 16
(Reuters) - Zimbabwe expects to harvest 2.5 million tonnes
of maize in
2009/2010 compared with 1.2 million tonnes in the previous
season, Finance
Minister Tendai Biti said on Wednesday.
Once a regional supplier of
grain, Zimbabwe has failed to feed itself since
2001, relying on imports and
donor handouts.
"I see no reason why, with the better preparations we are
having, we cannot
have a bumper harvest of 2.5 million tonnes," Biti told a
mining conference
in Harare.
Zimbabwe is holding the conference as
part of efforts by a new power-sharing
government to attract investment in
the southern African nation.
Analysts said it was unlikely that Zimbabwe
would be able to more than
double its maize output next year because of lack
of funds for inputs such
as fertilisers.
"It is a very ambitious
project to try and raise maize production to that
level simply because the
infrastructure does not support that and I doubt
they have enough money to
spend on fertilisers and seed," a Johannesburg
grain trader, who declined to
be named, said.
Another trader said the country's farmers would be unable
to increase output
without more government and donor support.
Biti
said in July the government would provide $142 million this year to
help
small farmers buy resources needed to boost food production and help
reverse
years of decline in farming.
Industry experts say production of all major
crops -- including maize, wheat
and tobacco -- has declined by more than 50
percent since 2001.
The United Nations' Food and Agriculture Organisation
(FAO) and World Food
Programme said in June about 2.8 million people in
Zimbabwe will face food
shortages in the coming year and will require some
228,000 tonnes of food
assistance, including 190,000 of cereals.
The
decline of the country's farm sector is blamed on the often violent
seizures
of white-owned commercial farms in 2000, which President Robert
Mugabe has
defended as necessary to correct colonial-era imbalances in land
ownership.
(Additional reporting by Shapi Shacinda in Johannesburg, editing
by Anthony
Barker)
Mugabe woos
mining firms, promises stable policies
http://af.reuters.com/
Wed Sep 16, 2009 12:38pm
EDT
* Approves 15 mining projects worth $400 mln since Feb
*
Mining now key sector after collapse of agriculture
* Rio Tinto says
uncertainty blocks investments
By Nelson Banya and MacDonald
Dzirutwe
HARARE, Sept 16 (Reuters) - Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe
urged foreign
mining companies to invest in the southern African country and
sought on
Wednesday to allay fears that such businesses could be
expropriated.
Mugabe told a mining conference in Harare that the
government would soon
pass a new law to govern the sector, which would
address concerns raised by
an earlier draft that had said foreign mining
companies could not hold more
than 49 percent of a business and had to sell
any stake above that to
Zimbabweans.
Following the collapse of
commercial agriculture, mining has become the top
foreign currency earner,
with gold alone bringing in a third of total export
earnings to a country
that says it is unlikely to receive bilateral
assistance soon.
[ID:nLG224373]
Mugabe, trying to woo badly needed foreign investment,
said the law would
seek a balance between attracting investors and
empowerment of Zimbabweans -
a key concern for his government.
Poor
power supply to mines was also a big concern to existing and potential
investors [ID:nWEA1244]
Mugabe said the proposed mining law would be
debated in the next session of
parliament, which starts later this
month.
"The review of the Mines and Minerals Act will seek to strengthen
the
relationship between the government and mining houses," he said in a
speech.
"It also seeks to ensure that Zimbabweans benefit from their natural
resources through the creation of an enabling framework."
The mining
conference is part of efforts by a new power-sharing government
to attract
investment in Zimbabwe, which has the world's second-biggest
platinum
reserves after South Africa and large deposits of diamonds, coal
and
nickel.
"The government is committed to ensuring that the policy
environment is
stable, predictable and sufficiently attractive to guarantee
investors good
returns," Mugabe said.
Victor Gapare, the president of
Zimbabwe's Chamber of Mines said Mugabe had
reiterated to a handful of
concerned investors in a private meeting the
country would not expropriate
mines.
The previous mining draft law raised fears of a repeat of the
violent
seizures of white-owned commercial farms in 2000, which Mugabe
defended as
necessary to correct colonial land imbalances but which critics
blame for
acute food shortages.
INVESTORS FACE
UNCERTAINTY
Participants at the conference said uncertainty over policies
would continue
holding back big new mining investment.
Niels
Kristensen, head of Rio Tinto's (RIO.L)(RIO.AX) diamond unit in
Zimbabwe
said at the conference although he was encouraged by the country's
aim to
improve its mining sector, more must be done to resolve uncertainty
and
attract new cash.
"Until we see some certainty, there won't be
significant investment in
mining," he said. [ID:nWEA1231]
But some
new cash was trickling into the mining sector.
Elton Mangoma, Zimbabwe's
economic planning minister, said the country had
approved 15 mining projects
worth $400 million since February this year, and
some were already being
developed.
Zimbabwe, which has had no meaningful exploration for the last
decade, said
it would set up a company to explore minerals in areas seen as
high risk by
private mining firms.[ID:nWEA1215]
Mining companies in
Zimbabwe include Anglo American (AAL.L) unit Anglo
Platinum (AMSJ.J), Impala
Platinum (IMPJ.J) and Rio, a major shareholder in
a diamond mine. (Writing
by James Macharia, Editing by Peter Blackburn)
(macdonald.dzirutwe@reuters.com;
+263 4 799 112)
President Mugabe calls
for investment in Zimbabwe
Associated Press
Sep 16, 12:23 PM EDT
By ANGUS SHAW
Associated Press
Writer
HARARE, Zimbabwe (AP) -- President Robert
Mugabe told businessmen Wednesday
that their potential investments in
Zimbabwe would be safe, while the
finance minister announced the country is
$5.7 billion in debt.
Mugabe, opening a two-day meeting on investment in
the once vibrant mining
industry, said that Zimbabwe's unity government has
made "satisfactory
progress" in creating a conducive environment for
investment.
"The sanctity of property rights and the rule of law in all
its dimensions
are fully respected," Mugabe said.
Zimbabwe's economic
meltdown began after Mugabe ordered the seizures of
thousands of white-owned
commercial farms in 2000, disrupting the
agriculture-based economy in the
former regional breadbasket.
His critics point to continuing human rights
violations, land seizures and
laws requiring a majority local stake in
foreign firms.
Mugabe has demanded that Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai,
the former
opposition leader, do more to get the sanctions lifted and
restore foreign
aid and investment.
But the European Union and other
Western nations say the coalition, formed
in February, has not done enough
to restore the rule of law and begin
democratic reform, blaming Mugabe and
high-level loyalists for resisting
change.
Zimbabwe is $5.7 billion
in debt, Finance Minister Tendai Biti told
reporters later
Wednesday.
"We hunt for money. Our situation is very rudimentary," he
said. "We are
unable to liquidate our debt."
Biti, a former
opposition official, said he would announce a national budget
review in
November in which support by the International Monetary Fund would
bolster
efforts to kick start Zimbabwe's crippled economy.
The IMF released $500
million earlier this month in a sign of acceptance for
the southern African
nation's new coalition. The money would be used for
reconstruction of roads
and water and energy supply and provide lines of
credit for
exporters.
But he warned that the IMF was not "a Father Christmas" and
that the use of
the funds would comply with international law and proper
fiscal discipline.
"There won't be anything that is consumptive and
short-term," he said.
Long while
before bilateral aid: Zimbabwe Finance Minister
http://af.reuters.com/
Wed Sep 16, 2009 10:47am
GMT
By MacDonald Dzirutwe
HARARE (Reuters) - Zimbabwe's
Finance Minister Tendai Biti said on Wednesday
it would be a "long while"
before the country, struggling to pull itself out
of an economic crisis,
received bilateral assistance.
Biti also told a mining conference
Zimbabwe could not return to using the
local dollar -- abandoned at the
start of the year after hyperinflation
rendered it worthless -- until the
economy could support the currency.
Zimbabwe says it needs $10 billion in
foreign aid to rebuild the country,
grappling with a dilapidated
infrastructure, hyperinflation and unemployment
of over 90
percent.
But Western nations who suspended aid over policy differences
with veteran
President Robert Mugabe are reluctant to release cash without
further
political and economic reform under a unity government he formed
with rival
Morgan Tsvangirai, now Prime Minister.
"It's going to be a
long while before bilateral assistance comes to Zimbabwe
... so we are
having to look at foreign direct investment," said Biti, a
minister from
Tsvangirai's MDC party.
Harare adopted the use of multiple currencies,
mainly the U.S. dollar and
the rand, to try and rein in
inflation.
"We cannot return to the Zimbabwe dollar ... unless we have an
economy that
supports the currency. Most of our friends (donors) are
sulking, so we have
to come up with our own local initiatives. We are on our
own," Biti said on
Wednesday.
Earlier this month the IMF said it had
transferred around $400 million in
special drawing rights to Zimbabwe under
a $250 billion global agreement to
bolster the reserves of its 186 member
countries in the wake of the
worldwide financial crisis.
The IMF
said, however, it would withhold another $102 million of Zimbabwe's
allocation by placing it in escrow until the country had cleared its $140
million IMF debt.
On Wednesday Biti said the government would
introduce a new income tax in
November which would see the application of a
"transparent and flat" tax
system. Biti gave no further detail.
Zimbabwe Labor Officials Attend Convention of American
Confederation
http://www.voanews.com
By Jonga Kandemiiri
Washington
15
September 2009
Representatives of the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade
Unions were in Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania on Tuesday attending the 26th
constitutional convention of the
American Federation of Labor-Congress of
Industrial Organizations, better
known as the AFL-CIO.
ZCTU President
Lovemore Matombo and Secretary General Wellington Chibebe
were invited by
the trade union federation to attend the convention, during
which AFL-CIO
President John J. Sweeney was to hand off to successor Richard
Trumka, a
third-generation coal miner.
Chibebe told reporter Jonga Kandemiiri of
VOA's Studio 7 for Zimbabwe that
workers in his country could learn much
from the relationship between the
U.S. government and
labor.
President Barack Obama addressed the convention Tuesday, telling
delegates
that America's success has been based on its middle class, which
opened
opportunity to others.
"And the fundamental test of this
century, of our time, is whether we will
heed this lesson, whether we will
let America become a nation of the very
rich and the very poor of the haves
and the have-nots, or whether we will
remain true to the promise of this
country and build a future where the
success of all of us is built on the
success of each of us," he said.
"That's the future I want to build,"
Obama told the labor convention.
"That's the future the AFL-CIO wants to
build. That's the future the
American people want to build. That's the
future that I've been working to
build from the moment I took
office."
President Obama also seized the occasion to drum up support for
the health
care reform legislation he hopes to see voted into law by the
House and
Senate later this year.
"We have talked this issue to
death, year after year, decade after decade,"
Mr. Obama said. That's why I
said the time for bickering is over, the time
for games has passed, now is
the time deliver on health care reform."
Tsvangirai's address to the Zim Employers' Confederation
Address by the
Prime Minister of Zimbabwe, the Right Honourable Morgan
Tsvangirai, to the
Employers' Confederation of Zimbabwe, Victoria Falls,
16th September
2009
Honourable Ministers Here Present,
The President of
Emcoz, Mr. D Govere,
Business and Industrial Leaders
Invited
Guests,
Ladies and Gentlemen;
Thank you for the opportunity to
address you today, as you consider how - as
employers - you can support the
process of Economic Recovery in Zimbabwe.
All of us here today must
work together to reshape our economic destiny to
meet the needs of our
people through establishing an environment that
encourages sustained
economic growth and development.
If we are to ensure
sustained recovery in the shortest possible time, every
sector in our
economy must unite to drive the process of recovery together
with
Government.
Ladies and Gentlemen, yesterday marked the one-year
anniversary of the
Global Political Agreement (GPA) which saw the formation
of the current
inclusive Government in an attempt to soft-land the country's
dire political
and economic crisis.
There is no doubt in my mind
that, despite the unpalatable compromises the
various signatories to the
agreement had to make, it was the right move for
the country, such was the
situation at the time.
The key issue to consider is how we can best
reshape our economic destiny to
allow Government to meet the needs of our
people through establishing an
environment that encourages sustained
economic growth and development.
If we are to ensure
sustained recovery in the shortest possible time, we
will have to seek out
and implement innovative approaches to sourcing the
capital requirements
needed for such a recovery.
Zimbabwe's economic stability requires
access to foreign markets, finance,
technologies, skills and ideas, which
are only made possible by all the key
stakeholders working together as
partners committed to our nation's
development.
The year 2008,
was the low-water mark in the history of Zimbabwe. We all saw
what chronic
mismanagement, combined with systemic kleptocracy, could do to
a once proud
and vibrant country.
Over a period of many years, the hard work,
commitment and honesty of the
many was slowly betrayed, undone, and stolen
by the few.
As Zimbabweans, we had started to lose pride in our
country. The legacy of
those that fought, and died to secure our
independence was in jeopardy and
more names were being added to the roll of
honour of those that have paid
the ultimate sacrifice for a democratic
country.
Today, we have managed to restore a modicum of
sanity to our country's
economy as well as beginning the process of
restoring basic services and
getting our schools and hospitals operating
again.
However, progress towards real change has not been as fast or
comprehensive
as the people demand or deserve and does not yet reflect an
adequate return
on the hope invested by the people of this
country.
Seven months since the formation of this new Government,
there can be no
excuse for the continued failure to implement in full, all
the articles of
the GPA. This deliberate attempt to frustrate the process of
change and the
rebuilding of our nation, is now affecting all aspects of our
society - an
aspect that you as employers are only too well aware
of.
Ladies and Gentlemen, we cannot let ourselves be diverted from
our quest to
drive the process of positive change within
Zimbabwe.
Let me assure you that I am fully committed to the
rebuilding of this great
nation. We have entered an irreversible process of
change, albeit a
difficult one.
Ladies and Gentlemen, let us be
frank about the scale of the task still
ahead of us, as we seek to rebuild a
country in which we can all rightly be
proud..
We have an economy
which, though now stable, is a shadow of what it once
was.
We
have an infrastructure which has crumbled due to years of looting and
underinvestment.
We have farms lying idle due to a corrupt and
inept land redistribution
program.
We have lost many of our most
qualified and educated citizens, who have left
the country in
despair.
Perhaps most dangerously, we still have a few people
clinging desperately to
a system in which they perverted the rule of law,
basic freedoms, and even
the institutions of the state to serve their own,
selfish and divisive
goals.
But the process of change has
started, and it is irreversible.
Slowly but surely, we are
dismantling the systems of privilege, entitlement
and impunity which
sheltered and protected the systematic looting of this
country.
Slowly but surely, we are rebuilding the solid economic
foundations, on
which we can build our future livelihoods.
Slowly
but surely, we are rebuilding the basic services and the basic
infrastructure which will serve our people, and allow them to be proud and
productive.
Slowly but surely, we are rebuilding the rule of law
and respect for
property rights, without which business cannot
function.
This is a process which will take some time. There have
been many
frustrations to date and more to come. But we will not let them
distract or
deter us from the mandate we have from the people to effect real
change in
their lives.
In this, I pledge to you:
as
businessmen, and businesswomen;
as employers and investors;
and
indeed as parents;
that we will secure the changes in Zimbabwe which we
need to give all our
citizens the opportunities they
deserve.
Those opportunities will be shared by the many, not the
few.
The State will not use its powers to interfere within the
boardrooms of
commerce and industry and where this has happened in the past,
the situation
will be rectified.
The rapid and effective
economic stabilisation which we achieved earlier
this year will now be
followed by a period of economic consolidation,
reform, and
investment.
My fellow Ministers and I invite you to share with us
your views on how best
we can achieve this. We certainly do not believe that
we have all the
answers.
What is clear is that a culture of
cooperation and consensus has begun to
take hold within Government, between
Government and business and between
Government and the people. This culture
is replacing the previous attitude
of impunity and entitlement that drove
the country to the brink of total
collapse.
The GPA commits
Government to establish a National Economic Council so that
key stakeholders
can act as advisors to Government and we can work as
partners in rebuilding
our nation.
I ask you as employers to partner with us on
rebuilding this country. In
turn, I will continue to tackle both the
mismanagement and the corruption
which has come to characterise government
in Zimbabwe. This is a fight that
must be fought and won, but that cannot be
won by Government alone.
In this fight to end the cancer of
corruption you too have a vital role to
play be refraining from encouraging
corrupt practices and instead reporting
them to my office. In my Government,
there will be zero tolerance for
corruption or practices that promote
corruption.
Real change is also required in the way business is
conducted. For too long,
too many businesses have been forced to rely on
patronage to survive. My
Government is committed to establishing an
environment determined by strong
market principals that encourages both
independence and innovation.
Ladies and Gentlemen, I am encouraged by
the fact that EMOCOZ has chosen the
theme "Decent Work for Economic
Development" for your congress this year.
Promoted by the
International Labour Organisation, Decent Work sums up the
aspirations of
people for work that is productive and delivers a fair
income, security in
the workplace and social protection for families; better
prospects for
personal development and social integration, freedom for
people to express
their concerns, organize and participate in the decisions
that affect their
lives and equality of opportunity and treatment for all
women and
men.
As a former Trade Unionist, and also as one who understands the
need for a
market-driven business environment, I applaud you for promoting
the rights
of the workers. A contented workforce is a productive
workforce.
Thus, with my assurance of the continued pursuit of
stability, real change
for the people of Zimbabwe and the support of this
Government for business
growth, it is my pleasure to formally open the EMCOZ
Congress 2009.
I thank you.
Zimbabwe Christian leaders (UK) to facilitate Role of
Diaspora In ZIM Transitional Process
Press Release
London, 10 September, 2009,
-Zimbabwean Christian and Lay Leaders in the UK
are meeting in London on the
Ist of October 2009 to facilitate how migrants
in the Diaspora can best
contribute towards their country's socio-economic
and political
development.
This inaugural conference entitled, 'Locating The Role of
The Diaspora in
Zimbabwe's transitional process', is being organised by the
Council of
Zimbabwean Christian Leaders Uk (CZCL UK).
The conference
comes at a time when Zimbabwe experiences a political test
during which many
in the Diaspora have been reduced to mere commentators and
Cynics of the
current goings on.
CZCL UK is convening this consultation to create a
credible yet effective
platform that will steer significant involvement of
Zimbabwean Christians in
the UK who are currently leaders or studying to be
the same in different
sectors of life. This platform will serve as a bridge
and overcome obstacles
posed by class, gender, color, ethnic orientation or
political affiliation
in this exercise.
The conference is a
significant step in providing an apolitical yet morally
credible movement of
Zimbabweans living abroad in fostering intelligent yet
constructive debate,
engagement and discourse that will give a definite
voice to those in the
Diaspora.
Speakers at the London Conference will include Hon.
Minister of State - Mr.
Gorden Moyo, Professor Ken Mufuka - Lander
University (USA), Dr. Sabelo
Gatsheni Ndlovu - Open University (UK),
Reverend Mucharutya Chisvo, Dr.
Julius Mugwagwa - Open University (UK),
Reverend Ray Motsi - Zimbabwe
Christian Alliance and Dr. John Makumbe -
Political Analyst.
One of the Key issues to be discussed during the
conference is how best to
involve the Diaspora in the current constitutional
reform process. The UK
hosts the second largest Zimbabwean population
outside Zimbabwe and it is
important to find ways of involving this
constituency in such an important
exercise.
CZCL is therefore
inviting to this conference skilled professionals,
students who have since
migrated to the UK, Churches, Community Leaders,
Academics, Aid
organizations and institutions as well as individuals who are
working on
issues related to Zimbabwe or the
Diaspora.
***
For Further information contact:
Taurainashe: 07787960979 or
Barbara: 077337077698
For conference e-mail: barbara@czcluk.com , levymoyo@czcluk.com,
qobo@czcluk.com Call us on + 44 (0)2085344568
(land) or +447733707698
(Mobile)
There
Will Be No Rest Until Zimbabweans Have Peace - Tsvangirai
http://www.radiovop.com
Harare,
September 16, 2009 - Zimbabwe's Prime Minister and Movement
for Democratic
Change leader Morgan Tsvangirai says he will not rest until
Zimbabweans have
peace and freedom.
A statement posted on his website on
Wednesday to mark one year
anniversary of the signing of the Global
Political Agreement (GPA) quoted
Tsvangirai saying: "We want people to live
peacefully. We want them to have
more freedoms. We want prosperity among our
people. We want them to restart
their lives and improve their lives and we
will not rest until this is
achieved."
"The GPA is not just a piece
of paper," he said. "The people of
Zimbabwe must actually own the agreement.
They must understand how that
agreement impacts on their lives. It's not
just a leadership issue. It is
for the people. It must be owned by
Zimbabweans."
"We have reduced tension across the political divide.
There was a
sense of hope to the people when we opened schools and hospitals
that had
closed down. We have started attracting international investment to
the
country and creating more business opportunities. The confidence of our
business community has grown. Generally, it is more of a situation where we
provided hope where there was despair."
Tsvangirai said the ride
has not been easy, saying: "But it would
appear our opponents or our
colleagues who are in ZANU PF, have not embarked
on a paradigm shift. You
still have the emphasis of apportioning blame on
the MDC (Movement for
Democratic Change). There is emphasis of apportioning
success on ZANU PF by
the State media. The hate language in the State media
is incessant. I will
give you an example of today's (Tuesday) Herald. It has
five negative
articles on MDC and you would think that we are running a
parallel
government."
"The Public Service Commission has not demonstrated the
new
dispensation. Some of my staff has not been appointed. My security
details
have not been incorporated or integrated into the structure of the
Government although they will continue working. The constitutional process
seems to be struggling to take off. The National Healing programme seems to
be up there and not having an impact on the people. So while we have
committed from our side of the bargain, I think ZANU PF is far from
that."
Mugabe is due to give progress of the GPA at a rare briefing
with
editors from both state-owned and private press at State House on
Thursday.
Mugabe has blamed MDC for failing to persuade the West to end
its
sanctions on Zimbabwe, which he said, are the main cause of Zimbabwe's
current economic and political suffering.
The GPA was brokered by
the Southern Africa Development Community
(SADC) through Thabo Mbeki, the
former South African president and was
signed on September 15,
2008.
However progress has been slowed down due to disagreements in the
implementation of the agreement. Most western countries have refused to
fully committ themselves financially to the inclusive government, demanding
first an improvement in the implementation of the GPA and an end to human
rights abuses.