The ZIMBABWE Situation
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Zimbabwe Bread Manufacturers Ask For Weekly Price Adjustments

VOA

By Blessing Zulu
      Washington
      06 September 2006

Zimbabwe's National Bakers Association has asked for a 75% increase in the
official price of bread to Z$385, or about US$1.50, from Z$220 at present.
It also urged that authorities review bread prices weekly so bakers can keep
pace with rising costs.

The bakers association may have trouble getting approval for a bread price
rise - the increasingly powerful central bank chief, Gideon Gono, told
parliament this week that he wants the government to freeze prices for six
months to brake inflation.

In a related development, the Consumer Council of Zimbabwe said Wednesday
that the cost of living for a family of six rose nearly 28% in August from
its July level.

The U.S.-based Famine Early Warning System, or FEWSNET, has projected that
the country will produce some 135,000 metric tonnes of wheat this year, 13%
higher than the 2005 production level of around 120,000 metric tonnes. But
this year's crop will nonetheless fall far short of the national requirement
of 400,000 tonnes.

For an industry perspective on the proposed bread price increase, reporter
Blessing Zulu of VOA's Studio 7 for Zimbabwe spoke with executive Luckymore
Zinyama of Harambe Holdings, owner of Mitchell's, a large Zimbabwean baking
company.


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Zimbabwe's Civil Society Seeks Support Across Southern African Region

VOA

By Patience Rusere
      Washington
      06 September 2006

The Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition, an umbrella for nongovernmental
organizations in the Southern African country, has launched a new initiative
to mobilize civic groups in nearby countries to support the Zimbabwean
opposition's drive for reform.

Leaders of the group have just returned from Tanzania and in recent weeks
traveled to Botswana and South Africa. They soon will visit Malawi and
Zambia.

Crisis Coalition Advocacy Officer Itayi Zimunya told reporter Patience
Rusere that his group hopes non-governmental organizations around the
Southern AFrican region will lobby their own governments to take a firmer
stance on the Zimbabwe crisis.


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State Issues Directive On School Fees



The Herald (Harare)

September 6, 2006
Posted to the web September 6, 2006

Harare

THE Ministry of Education, Sport and Culture has directed that the inflation
rule for school fees and levies be backdated to the third term of last year
when calculating the fees for this term.

This could see a significant reduction in fees and levies charged this term
at most schools.

In effect, the directive states that fees for the term that started
yesterday must be those for the third term of last year, adjusted for
inflation.

Most non-Government schools -- mission and trust schools in the main -- were
caught flat-footed by the unexpected surge in inflation in the last half of
last year and had to push fees up significantly in the first term this year
in order to maintain services.

Government schools raised their levies significantly at the beginning of the
year as well.

In both sectors, fees and levies tended to be at an historic low once
adjusted for inflation.

Trust and mission schools generally used the expected inflation for the
first term to calculate second term fees, acting in the spirit of an
agreement they reached with the Government although this was not yet law.

For this term, non-Government schools had been calculating fees, and
Government schools had been calculating levies, based on last term's
figures, adjusted for inflation during that term.

Parents had been warned that the fees for this term under this inflation
rule were likely to be a little over double last term's fees once the August
figure for the consumer price index (CPI) was issued, probably next week.

The amendments to the Education Act that establish the inflation rule were
gazetted, and so became law, only after the start of last term.

Under these amendments, non-Government schools must apply for permission to
raise fees or levies, but the permission must also be granted automatically
so long as the increases do not exceed the percentage increase in the cost
of living index over the preceding term.

Because the figures for the cost of living at the end of August are not yet
out, most schools had set a provisional fee, pending approval, based on the
CPI for June or July and had warned of a top-up fee when the final increase
in the CPI for last term was known.

The Central Statistical Office normally publishes the CPI index for the end
of a month in the second week of the next month.

The new directive was issued by the Secretary for Education, Sport and
Culture, Dr Stephen Mahere, in a Press statement on Monday.

He warned that school authorities who increase fees and levies in violation
of the law risk being prosecuted in terms of the provisions of the Education
and the Anti-Corruption Acts.

While Dr Mahere, as Secretary, has to consider all applications and approve
or disprove them, he has directed that the applications for fee increases
must be submitted through provincial education directors.

He reminded schools of the provision in the amended Act that fees or levies
paid by day pupils should not exceed 30 percent of those paid by those in
boarding, or 40 percent if day pupils are provided with meals at the school,
unless special approval was obtained.

It is understood that this provision might well see the abolition of
boarding places at non-Government schools that are largely day schools and
the abolition of day places at schools that largely cater for boarders.

Justifying his directives, Dr Mahere said: "Zimbabwe has always subscribed
to the principle of education as a basic human right. In pursuance of this
goal, the ministry believes that education should continue to be accessible
and affordable to the majority of the people," said Dr Mahere.

Schools have already been complaining that there has been a huge delay in
consideration of increases. Some applied five weeks ago and have heard
nothing.

Prince Edward school headmaster Mr Kevin Atkinson said schools faced
problems when the Ministry of Education, Sport and Culture takes time to
approve proposed fees or levies.

"When the ministry takes long to approve fees or levies, creditors are not
patient so it's a big problem for schools," he said.

Mr Atkinson said sometimes by the time the proposed fees and levies were
approved, prices would have gone up several times.

An official at Girls High School said authorities need to approve proposed
fees and levies in a reasonable period of time for schools to make proper
financial decisions.

"If the fees or levies are approved after a longtime, prices would have gone
up and at times, the proposed increases would be meaningless," said the
official who requested anonymity.

Schools in Zimbabwe opened for the third term yesterday.


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Cross-border cattle rustling rife

The Zimbabwean

 HARARE - Two decades of a campaign to de-mine Zimbabwe's border areas has
invented fresh problems for villagers living along the Zambezi Valley and
those along the Mozambican border.
Border areas were heavily mined to slow down the progress of guerilla
fighters crossing the Zambezi River on the country's northern border onto
the battlefront during Zimbabwe's 16-year guerilla war for independence that
ended in 1979.
But the mine clearance exercise has open new avenues for cross-border cattle
rustling creating insecurity among the villagers in the area.
During the Defence Forces Day celebrations on August 15, President Mugabe
commended the work to de-mine border areas done by the Zimbabwe National
Army.
So pleased with the success of such hazardous work was Mugabe that he
promoted military men involved in the exercise and awarded them medals as
Commander-in Chief of the Defence Forces.
Government says more than 276 square kilometres of mine-infested land
between the Victoria Falls and Mlibizi Fishing resort bordering Zambia would
soon be handed over to the Ministry of Local Government, Public Works and
Urban Development and the Ministry of Environment and Tourism for productive
use.
Clearing thousands of anti-personnel landmines laid during the independence
war opened corridors for armed cross-border cattle rustlers into the Zambezi
Valley areas of Kazungula, Victoria Falls, Hwange and Binga as well as along
the border with Mozambique, local chiefs say.
"People from across the river have intensified their cattle rustling
activities stealing goats, sheep, donkeys and cattle. The villagers are
helpless against armed cattle rustlers," says traditional Chief Zondani Joan
Shana of rural Hwange.
He says when Zambians realised that the landmines had been cleared they
started crossing the Zambezi to poach villagers' livestock.
The minefields had acted as a deterrent but posed grave danger to both
humans and livestock. Chief Shana estimates that more than 420 beasts have
been stolen from January to March this year.
A frightening aspect of the problem is that the cattle rustlers arm
themselves with firearms retrieved from caches that have remained a
hazardous legacy after the end of independence war.
"The Zambians seem to know places where arms were cached during the
cease-fire period. They know how to negotiate their way to get these
firearms that they use to intimidate the villagers," Chief Shana says.
"They know too a lot about landmines and they can find their way to the
firearms without danger."
Mugabe, said the Zimbabwe Defence Forces (ZDF) had de-mined  the Gona-reZhou
National Park in south eastern Zimbabwe and that de-mining the area would
spur efforts to put in place the Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park - a
multi-billion dollar tripartite tourist project involving Zimbabwe, South
Africa and Mozambique.
Along the eastern border in areas such as Chikombedzi, Malipati, Gezani and
Mkakani in the rural Sengwe, cattle rustling has proved a headache to local
chiefs who believe that rustlers drive stolen herds into Mozambique where
they fetch hard currency.
While local villagers, some of whom own up to 200 head of cattle welcome the
de-mining plan, others fear it might open a safer corridor for cattle
rustlers from neighbouring Mozambique.
"It is now a problem we have learnt to live with. The minefields had
somewhat slowed rustlers," says Chief Lisimati Sengwe.
Another chief in the area said some of the villagers had armed themselves
with bow and arrows and tracked the rustlers into Mozambique. The rustlers,
he said slaughtered some of the beasts and dried the meat on their way back
home where there is a ready market. He said villagers hoped the government
would react swiftly to the people's plight.
Cattle rustling appears to have replaced rhino poaching mainly undertaken
for its horn which has subsided due to protracted joint efforts by the
Zambian and Zimbabwean government.
A senior game ranger in Gona re Zhou, who spent 15 years in Hwange National
Park and the Zambezi Valley but now operates from Chiredzi district in south
eastern Zimbabwe, says poaching for rare species remained prevalent in the
Zambezi area.
Luke Njiva says poachers operating in the Zambezi Valley came mainly from
Zambia and Angola.  "Poaching in the Gona reZhou is not so damaging because
it is mainly for subsistence purposes unlike the poaching in the Zambezi
Valley which is for commercial purposes. For instance cattle rustlers last
year shot and killed a Chiredzi village head, his wife and two children
after accusing them of reporting their criminal activity to the police."
According to the police the suspects, who were working as a syndicate with
Mozambicans, had been responsible for rampant stock theft activities in
Chikombedzi and taking the loot to Mozambique for sale. Police had recovered
six AK 47 rifle cartridges and a Mozambican matchbox at the scene.
The headman had teamed up with the police and recovered seven of his stolen
cattle in Mozambique.
Police Commissioner, Augustine Chihuri last month announced, during a police
graduation ceremony, that the force had established a crack anti-stocktheft
unit to curb cattle rustling.
Rustlers had taken advantage of a breakdown in law and order on commercial
farms following the relocation and resettlement of new families on land
forcibly acquired from white commercial farmers. - CAJ News


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CHRA plans demo

The Zimbabwean

HARARE - The Combined Harare Residents Association (CHRA) has resolved to
carry on with street protests until sanity returns to Town House.
"Our latest action will be held before 13 September, 2006 when the City of
Harare closes doors to objections to the intended sale of a council house to
Sekesai Makwavarara, the chairperson of the commission running the affairs
of the capital," said Precious Shumba, the information officer.
Shumba said Makwavarara had already made a down payment of Z$1, 4 million
towards the purchase, yet the process of objections was still ongoing.
"This is corruption which CHRA condemns in the strongest terms," said
Shumba.
Chinamasa acquitted
HARARE - Justice, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs minister, Patrick
Chinamasa was this week acquitted of trying to defeat the course of justice.
The court found evidence given by a key state witness, James Kaunye,
inconsistent.
Chinamasa is accused of putting pressure on James Kaunye to withdraw charges
against National Security minister Didymus Mutasa's supporters, in the
second case of alleged attempt to defeat the course of justice levelled
against him in his career as Justice Minister. - CAJ News


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Ever on the Move

The Zimbabwean

People are deeply attached to the place where they were born. And yet they
dream of faraway places. We love Zimbabwe and hate Britain, but given a
chance we leave our home and go to stay with the enemy.
Peoples and nations have always been on the move. The Vandals "vandalized"
the Roman Empire, the Bantu peoples moved from north to south and pushed the
San people ("bushmen") into the desert. Europeans moved to America, Africa
and Australia. Now Africans seek their fortune in Europe: ironically, there
are now more Zimbabweans in Britain than there ever were Britons in
Zimbabwe.
Often enough it is precisely the love of home and family which drives people
to distant parts. The Migrant Labour System in Southern Africa has created
much wealth for this region, first for the immigrants from overseas, to a
much lesser extent for the migrants from within the region. Now AIDS thrives
where marital fidelity has been undermined.
Thriving economies suck in labour from stagnant economies: in the past
Rhodesia from Nyassaland, now South Africa from Zimbabwe, Western Europe
from the East, the USA from Mexico, Europe from Africa.
Some families benefit from remittances sent home. Others fall apart after
years of separation. The human cost is often not counted.
People are forced to adapt to the economy, not the economy to the people.
Employers want labour. They ignore that labour means people, husbands and
wives with families.
Europe is putting up walls with razor wires to keep economic refugees out of
their "fortress " and chasing their fragile nutshells with speed boats. But
only if companies move factories to Africa will workers stay at home.
The Church knows no frontiers. She must accompany the migrants and receive
them everywhere. Jesus was a refugee once and had "nowhere to lay his head".
Companions of Jesus know that "it is their vocation to travel to many
parts". Ignatius was known as "pilgrim". His friend Francis Xavier reached
then unknown Japan and died on the doorsteps of China. Another companion,
Peter Faber, travelled all over Europe and stayed nowhere permanently.
The "Jesuit Refugee Service" tries to assist people on the move in many
parts of the world.
The new bishop of Chinhoyi, a former director of JRS, has the refugee logo
in his coat of arms. Many with roots in the Church are part of the moving
people of the world. Hopefully their shepherds too. - Comment - In Touch
Jesuit Communications


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Zimdaily.com slammed for plagiarism

The Zimbabwean

By Our Correspondent
HARARE -While Zimbabwe-related online news agencies are important in filling
the information gap created by the regime's repressive media laws, the
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ) has slammed one agency,
Zimdaily.com, for plagiarism.
MMPZ said that in the week August 21-27, Zimdaily.com lifted some five
stories from other publications and simply presented them as its own. On
August 21, the agency lifted verbatim two stories on the currency change
over that had appeared the previous week in the Mail and Guardian and
Zimbabwe Independent.
On the same day the website also stole from the Cape Argus a story about
civic groups' concern over the failure of a SADC summit in Maseru to censure
Robert Mugabe. Later in the week, Zimdaily.com ran word-for-word a
substantial part of a ZimObserver report on Zimbabwe buying Chinese fighter
planes. Similarly, said MMPZ, a story on a rally by the Arthur Mutambara MDC
faction was largely lifted from a report by Peta Thornycroft which appeared
on VOANEWS.COM.
Plagiarism -giving the impression that somebody else's work is your
own -violates journalistic ethics.
"Such unprofessional conduct gives the authorities an excuse to retain their
tyrannical media laws, which they have used to either silence the private
media or stifle the establishment of alternative sources of information,"
said the media watchdog.
Elsewhere, the state-run media's efforts to avoid reporting on, let alone
investigating, anything that portrays the regime in a bad light led to fresh
distortions and contradictions.
Despite reporting symptoms of the chaos in the currency changeover, such as
businesses refusing to accept old notes on the eve of the changeover or the
critical shortage of small denominations in the new currency, the state
mouthpieces continued more or less celebrating the changeover.
Thus The Herald reported on its front-page that in some cases armed police
were called in to maintain order, while claiming in commentary a that the
exercise went "remarkably smoothly." Just a few local problems which were,
as ever, the fault of someone else, anyone else. In this case, The Herald
cited "laziness by some bank managers in some branches and the desperate
desire of Zimbabweans to keep large sums of cash at home."
Even when Reserve Bank governor Gideon Gono acknowledged that all was not
well, the state media shied away. The Herald and The Chronicle saw the
extension of the currency changeover deadline in rural areas not as
reflection of the chaos, but passively quoted Gono as seeing himself as
magnanimous.
MMPZ noted the state media also made no attempt to square Gono's claim that
the changeover was a success with his revelation that $10 trillion (about
22% of the total cash in circulation) was still unaccounted for after the
August deadline.
The private media, however, highlighted the inconveniences and the gloomy
outlook. The Daily Mirror said that the authorities had already printed more
new bank notes dated March 2006 which Gono threatened to introduce at 24
hours' notice.
However, only Studio 7, SW Radio Africa and ZimDaily reported the arrests in
Bulawayo of 200 women from Women of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA) for demonstrating
against the economic mess.
Commented MMPZ: "None of the mainstream media appeared to consider this
effort to prevent the women from exercising their right to express
themselves a newsworthy event."


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ZCTU jambanja planned

The Zimbabwean

HARARE - Zimbabwe's main labour movement has called for a national strike on
September 13 over poor salaries and the inadequate provision of
antiretroviral drugs to workers, warning the stoppage could last
indefinitely if the government did not accede to the demands.
Lovemore Matombo, president of Zimbabwe's Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU),
said the ZCTU's general council that met in Norton on Sunday unanimously
decided to roll out mass protests to press for a minimum wage of Z$90,000, a
review of the tax-free threshold from 35 percent to 30percent and the
free-provision of ARV drugs to combat HIV/AIDS which is killing at least
3,000 people every week in Zimbabwe.
There was no immediate reaction from the government on the strike threat.
But Labour minister Nicholas Goche was quoted by State television saying the
government was working on urgent measures to cushion workers and consumers
from high inflation.
The MDC called on "all progressive Zimbabweans" to support the strike,
saying it was time to protest President Mugabe's legendary economic
mismanagement.
"There is no doubt that workers are all the more poorer because of bad
governance," MDC secretary general Tendai Biti said. - Own correspondent


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Prayers for reconciliation

The Zimbabwean

HARARE - President Robert Mugabe's cornered regime last week pleaded with
some obscure representatives of nine European countries who came to
apologize for the sins of their ancestors, to ask their governments to lift
sanctions imposed on Zimbabwe.
Addressing the European-African Reconciliation Process Prayer Network
conference in Harare last week, Chris Seaton, leader of the nine
representatives from Britain, France, Germany, America, Austria,
Netherlands, Spain, Portugal and Belgium said they were in Zimbabwe to
apologise on behalf of their ancestors who had "pillaged the continent,
leading to Africa's current underdevelopment".  Presented with such a rare
occasion to push its anti-west propaganda which of late has had no takers,
President Mugabe's regime immediately seized the opportunity to flog its
rhetoric that sanctions were hurting ordinary Zimbabweans.
The president of the Chiefs Council Fortune Charumbira said: "I am stunned
by what I saw and I didn't expect it to come from the arrogant whites,
kneeling before us in typical African culture, asking for forgiveness for
the sins committed by their ancestors to us."
Charumbira said the European Christian representatives should call on their
governments to remove "sanctions" imposed on the Zanu (PF) government
because they were "hurting people." An EU travel ban applies personally to
government ministers and a few other individuals complicit in the abuse of
human rights but is willfully misrepresented by the Mugabe regime as
sanctions against Zimbabwe as a nation.
Former Mozambican President Joachim Chissano, who also attended the
conference, said the reconciliatory initiatives being pursued were symbolic
for Zimbabwe, "currently suffering the effects of unjust international
relations."  President Mugabe, who was supposed to address the conference,
did not turn up in as yet unclear circumstances. - Own correspondent


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Govt jitters as MDC demo looms

The Zimbabwean

BY GIFT PHIRI
HARARE - As the day of nationwide mass protest draws near, the government
has gone into panic mode.  Faced with the prospect of a crippling civil
disobedience campaign following opposition MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai's
landmark march on Parliament last Friday, the Mugabe regime has been
desperately beefing up security in the capital and at government
institutions.
Tsvangirai's march was joined by several senior officials from the MDC and
more than 500 afternoon shoppers. The police were caught flat-footed and
failed to respond as the large group marched from the party's Harvest House
headquarters in central Harare to Parliament Building and back, brandishing
placards demanding Mugabe's exit.
With tensions rising throughout the country and many civic groups such as
WOZA, the Combined Harare Residents Association, the National Constitutional
Assembly and the labour movement all planning mass protests, the Joint
Operations Command is in a flap.
Highly placed defence sources told The Zimbabwean that all strategic
national areas such as government offices and fuel stations catering for
state security vehicles would be heavily guarded because of fears that
opposition party activists could tamper with them to immobilise the security
forces.
They said the provincial JOC heads had been given strict orders to ensure
that the protests did not turn violent, as any violence could be used by the
MDC and foreign countries to justify international intervention.
"The provincial JOCs have been told that we should make no show of force
because the MDC wants to use the 'Sharpeville massacres trick' to get
international sympathy and possibly foreign intervention," a senior police
officer in Harare said. The CIO, according to well-placed sources here, is
frantically trying to manufacture evidence pointing to a foreign hand in the
organization of the planned mass action, whose timing and duration the MDC
has still to announce.
The government has specifically accused Britain of being involved in the
threatened strike, but London has rejected the charge as absurd.
State Security minister Didymus Mutasa alleged that the MDC was paying
people to engage in the strike. He said adequate measures had been taken to
prevent anarchy but could neither deny nor confirm that the army was also
involved in the exercise.
The MDC has denied state media reports that it is funding youths to
spearhead the strike.


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Where is the action?

The Zimbabwean

BY KJW
Zimbabwe is a "time bomb ticking which could all too easily explode into
deadly violence that would not only ravage Zimbabwe but would also
destabilise South Africa and other states in the region," according to a
recent report by the International Crisis Group (ICG). Unless the opposition
movements and civil society groups co-ordinate a mass action plan, the ICG
warns that there might be "an explosion that could cost thousands of lives".
At present the opposition is fragmented. The MDC is split and while the
majority Tsvangirai-led faction has been in consultation with the people
since last year, to decide upon the next step, no concrete plans have been
put forward. According to the report, a sense of "paralysis hangs over the
country" and the stalemate is only likely to be broken by some sort of
"domestic resistance". The report calls upon the MDC and civil society to
manage the resistance by working together in a loose coalition to "speak to
the government with one voice."
In a recent discussion programme, SW Radio's Violet Gonda interviewed women
activists and opposition leaders. WOZA co-ordinator Jenni Williams said that
in her experience, in order for mass action to be successful "you have to
have confidence-building activities". She added: "We don't have a lot of
confidence in the fact that mass action is definitely on the agenda and
being planned, when we do not see these confidence-building measures."
She said the MDC's claim that they were consulting the masses on a way
forward, was still seen as rhetoric. WOZA did not see a real consultative
process at the grassroots level because they, as a grassroots movement, had
not been consulted by any of the political parties. She said that she was
"very surprised" that they had not been approached. However, Sekai Holland
from the Tsvangirai MDC said that the consultation process was, as far as
she could see, "on course".
According to ICG, public discontent is at an "all time high" due to
Operation Murambatsvina and the economic crisis. However the "MDC may not be
ready to take advantage" as it "gives the impression of scrambling to catch
up to scenarios that continually take it by surprise."
In order for the MDC to get the country back on the road to democracy, the
ICG says that it must first overcome its "serious internal divisions" and
mount an "effective non violent resistance campaign". The report does
indicate some hope of co-operation between the two factions of the MDC and
civil society as both Tsvangirai and Mutambara attended a Christian Alliance
meeting in June 2006 to discuss greater unity.
Speaking on SW Radio, Thoko Matshe from the Mutambara-led MDC, said: "I
think we have allowed ourselves to be divided and ruled," adding, "What I am
getting to hear from my colleagues is that we should have more
co-ordination". However she felt that many Zimbabweans were sitting on the
sidelines rather than getting involved in the struggle. "People are
expecting other people to do, there are too few people n the frontline being
hit over and over again," she said.
The ICG report indicated that fear of retribution from the government
prevents many people from participating in mass protests, although it does
point out that if large numbers of Zimbabweans take to the streets in
peaceful protests, the army "might prefer to stand aside".
The report says that the MDC and civil society organisations need to engage
the people's support for mass action by appealing to their discontent about
the economic situation rather than the democratic one. In a country where a
majority of the population lives on or below the poverty line, protests
regarding bread and butter issues are more likely to goad people into
action.
Despite Holland's assertion that "it's very insulting and abusive" for the
media to keep saying Zimbabweans are spectators when every Zimbabwean here
in Zimbabwe is "struggling to survive and is struggling for change", Matshe
concedes that Zimbabweans "are in survival mode. We are not really in a mode
of change for democracy and building that democracy."


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Pre-conditions for a new constitution

The Zimbabwean

What it takes to produce a blueprint for our future
'The clash between two groups of utterly selfish, greedy and power-hungry
people is not likely to create a just and compassionate society'
By Fr Oskar Wermter SJ
When people concerned about good governance discuss a new constitution for
Zimbabwe they immediately go into details: should we have an executive
president or a prime minister? Should we have a lower and an upper house,
two chambers, or just one?
But before we go into these details we need to look at something much more
fundamental.
What are the preconditions for a new constitution?  With what kind of mental
attitude must we approach the making of a new constitution?
After all, Africa is littered with ineffective constitutions that were not
worth the paper they were written on.
If a constitution is framed mainly for the purpose of keeping the ruling
party in power it is not a proper constitution at all, and there is no
constitutional government.
The essence of a constitution is that it creates permanent structures for
non-permanent, changing governments. A written constitution is taming power;
it says: power is temporary and limited, relative, not absolute. Politicians
operating under constitutional law accept that politics is a game: one time
you win, another time you lose. That makes them statesmen. Which "ruling
party" politicians are not.
Democracy has been likened to a boxing ring. The opponents hit each other
hard, but they do not destroy each other.  The battle for power does not
become destructive violence. A certain balance of power is established.
That is already quite an achievement. But it is not good enough.
Marx thought that the class struggle would produce the ideal society,
destruction would lead to construction, conflict to universal harmony.  But
we know: the destruction of the present regime does not necessarily lead to
a better, more acceptable form of government. The clash between two groups
of utterly selfish, greedy and power-hungry people is not likely to create a
just and compassionate society. It may just exchange one autocrat for
another.
Those who pursue mere sectional interests do not improve the country as a
whole.
We need to work as a nation for the common good even if we disagree about
how to achieve this. We may disagree about the means, but not about the end.
People need to have a sense of ownership and citizenship. They must identify
with the whole country and accept all inhabitants all fellow citizens. As
citizens they must feel responsible for the whole country. If they submit
out of fear to the notion that only the current leaders own the country then
they are not citizens but slaves and unable to frame a constitution. That is
the fundamental defect of the ruling class that they see themselves who
share a common revolutionary past  as the sole owners of  the country and
therefore fail to build a house (=constitutional state) for all to live in,
even for those not of their class and background.
They must have a sense of the worth and dignity of all citizens individually
and of the citizenry as a whole. If only a minority see themselves as owners
and full citizens they cannot frame a constitution for all. Only free men
and women who recognize the claim to freedom of all can express their common
vision and their common values in a constitution. If they have no common
values and do not respect each other as equal citizens, they will not be
able to build a constitutional state, but will continue as feudal serfs
under chiefs and crave favours from autocrats.
The bill of rights, which is contained in the preamble of most
constitutions, must live in the hearts of citizens long before it is
formulated in a written text.  Respect for the rights of others, acceptance
of one's own duties towards them, as well as a common desire for justice
must drive people when framing a constitution. If these moral and spiritual
convictions and habits are not there any constitution written in such a
vacuum will be mere paper.


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The Zimbabwean Classifieds 05-09-2006


Employment offered
Australia - R 120 p/h Boilermaker, Scaffolder, Rigger, Welder - Required
urgently. Must have passport, be qualified. 4yrs exp., heavy industry, visa
arranged. email - junec@telkomsa.net
Australia - Stonemason - Closing date 2006/11/29, Job ID 1718. Company name
Maxim Marble P/L. Stonemason, to cut and carve granite and marble for
kitchen and bathroom applications.
Key Duties: cutting carving, matching and installation of kitchen stone
bench tops. No specific qualifications required but experience in the stone
kitchen trade is essential. Experienced with the use of angle grinders is
necessary. Some training will be provided. Salary AUD$ $ 40,000 + gross per
year. Melbourne. 10 vacancies.
Contact: maree_natalrecruit@msn.com. Applicants must be prepared to complete
Australian overseas trade recognition which is $300aus.  Minimum 6 years
work experience on the resume.  Not necessary to have trade papers.  Open to
all Zimbabweans, include UK/SA Asylum seekers.

Waiter & Bar Tender's course + job placement. Call 011 331 9758

Find a job now in Johannesburg!
Employment wanted
Fully Experienced Zimbabwean Motor Mech, esp extra heavy duty, seeks work
for hire/full time. Based in Cape Town.Cell:+27 73 038 0955

Lovemore Tafirenyika Makunike - Young man aged 20 B.M.A Diploma looking for
anything suitable. One and half years as in supervisory level. Email:
mutsakw@yahoo.co.zw Or call Wison on 26311765762

Events
Amicus and ACTSA Fringe Meeting, "Trade and its impact on Africa ", Speakers
to include: Peter Mandelson, EU Commissioner for Trade, Rt. Hon. Ian
McCartney MP, Ibrahim Patel - General Secretary Textile Workers Union, South
Africa, Sunday 24th September 1700 - 1830; Richter Room, Radisson Edwardian
Hotel. Refreshments provided. All Welcome

*BCUK* in association with *The Book Cafe* Harare presents*Paw Paw Jam* - A
showcase of Zimbabwean music and culture. Art, Poetry, Jazz, Drama, Punk,
Comedy, Film and Dance. Wednesday, *20th September* 7pm-11pm Bethnal Green
Workingmen's Club42-46 Pollards Row, Bethnal Green, E2 6NB *Entry £5* All
profits towards supporting music and culture in Zimbabwe through Pamberi
Trust. For more info email tomas.brickhill@gmail.com There is still space
for a couple more performers. If you would be interested in performing at
this or future BCUK events email bookcafeuk@gmail.com

Open Forum 2006 hosted by the Britain Zimbabwe Society, University of London
Union, Malet Street, London WC1E 7HY. This is very close to
 SOAS, at the junction of Malet Street and Torrington Place (not more than 5
minutes walk from the Brunei). The entrance is right opposite the side of
Waterstones Bookshop, on Saturday 16 September. This year's programme will
focus on the skills and experience available in the diaspora and Zimbabwe's
need for change and transformation. The forum will be held from 2:00pm to
5:30pm. Attendance is free although it is advisable to register in advance
by emailing zimforum2006@yahoo.co.uk. There is a travel fund available for
those who are unable to attend for financial reasons. Those applying for
this should email the Zimbabwe Association zimbabweassociation@yahoo.co.uk
with their name, contact details, how much their travel will cost and why
they want to attend the forum.
Miscellaneous Ruwona - MDC UK Women's Chair Suzeet Kwenda-Ruwona would like
to thank members of the MDC, family and friends for the support they gave at
the sad lose of her father in-law Mr D. Ruwona who passed away so suddenly
here in the U.K. Thank you all so much for the support given to my husband
Paul T.J. Ruwona and my mother in-law Mrs J. Ruwona. Special thanks go to
the Ruwona families, Matara families and the Kada families here in the U.K.
and in Zimbabwe for the financial and emotional support.May his soul rest in
peace and may God bless you all abundantly.

Zimbabwe National Human Resources Skills Survey. Zimbabweans in the Diaspora
are requested to participate in this survey to enable us to present a
correct picture of the brain drain problem in Zimbabwe and hence propose
effective mechanisms to address the problem. The survey will take you about
15 minutes to complete:
http://www.surveymonkey.com/s.asp?A=144167417E94315

Miscellaneous for sale
Books by Cathy Buckle - "African Tears" and "Beyond Tears" are available
from: orders@africabookcentre.com; http://africantears.netfirms.com
Quality coffins & caskets. Don't be 'ripped-off' at this sad time! Buy
direct from the top manufacturer.25 Lobengula Rd Southerton Tel
263-4-665791/2

Property
Bulawayo - Zimbabwe 4 Bedroom large executive House for Sale, with many
extra's, 2 1/4 acres, swimming pool, borehole, Price GBP 55000 or HCO
negotiable. Please contact Laurie Bond Mobile:  + 267 72333377 Home:   + 267
392 6787. email: bla@botsnet.bw

Country Home for Sale: Four bedroom thatched home, set in 10.5 acres of bush
and garden, 14km from Bulawayo. 15 minute drive from good private schools.
Spacious open plan living and dining area, with jetmaster fireplace opening
on to large veranda. Fitted pine kitchen onto dining area Large, airy, North
facing loft master bedroom with ensuite bathroom and balcony. Downstairs, 3
bedrooms with built in cupboards, bathroom with shower, added toilet.
Extensive gardens, 2 equipped boreholes with good water. Fenced paddock,
fruit trees and cultivated market garden area. Swimming pool converted from
reservoir. Stables, 2 double garages, workshops and 2 offices, car
maintenance pit, cold room and various outbuildings. 3 domestic workers
quarters. For further information please contact:
andrewc@novoshorisontes.net; Phone: + 258 825 156060 OR djc@mweb.co.zw.
Phone:+ 263 9 91 233189/+ 263 9 251145/232136
We can facilitate your divorce, phone 791685/6, and visit
www.divorcematters.co.zw

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