News Release – Southern Africa Litigation Centre (SALC)
8 May 2012
JOHANNESBURG – In a landmark decision for
local and international justice,
the North Gauteng High Court ruled this
morning that the South African
authorities must investigate Zimbabwean
officials, who are accused of
involvement in torture and crimes against
humanity in Zimbabwe.
“This judgment will send a shiver down the spines of
Zimbabwean officials
who believed that they would never be held to account
for their crimes but
now face investigation by the South African
authorities,” said Nicole Fritz,
Executive Director of the Southern Africa
Litigation Centre (SALC), which
brought the case along with the Zimbabwean
Exiles Forum (ZEF).
In a very strong ruling, Judge Hans Fabricius said that
the National
Prosecuting Authority (NPA) and the South African Police
Services (SAPS) had
acted unconstitutionally and unlawfully in not taking
forward the original
investigation. His judgment also underlined in the
strongest terms South
Africa’s obligations under international law.
“This
decision is not just about Zimbabwe, it also sets a much broader
precedent
by ruling that South African authorities have a duty to
investigate
international crimes wherever they take place,” said Fritz. “It
is a major
step forward for international criminal justice.”
In March 2012, SALC and ZEF
argued in the High Court that the decision of
the NPA and SAPS not to
investigate Zimbabwean officials linked to acts of
state-sanctioned torture
should be set aside. Brought in terms of South
Africa’s International
Criminal Court Act, which defines torture as a crime
against humanity, the
applicants' argued that the NPA and SAPS had failed to
take into account
South Africa’s international and domestic law obligations
to investigate and
prosecute perpetrators of international crimes regardless
of where they are
committed or by whom.
The case highlighted South Africa’s duty to investigate
crimes against
humanity, the sufficiency of the evidence presented by SALC
to the NPA and
SAPS to trigger an investigation and how irrelevant
considerations – such as
political concerns – improperly influenced the
decision. The case also
exposed divisions within the NPA after Anton
Ackermann, the head of the
Priority Crimes Litigation Unit that is
responsible for the investigation
and prosecution of international crimes,
stated in an affidavit that he
believed that an investigation should have
been initiated and that he was
not satisfied with the manner in which SALC’s
request was dealt with.
For more information and interviews
contact:
Nicole Fritz, SALC Executive Director, +27 11 587 5065, Cell +27 82
600
1028; NicoleF@salc.org.za
Gabriel Shumba, ZEF
Chairperson, Cell +27 72 639 3795
Alan Wallis, SALC, Off + 27 11 587 5065,
Cell +27 82 826 5700;
AlanW@salc.org.za
SALC promotes human
rights and the rule of law in southern Africa through
litigation, advocacy
and training. ZEF seeks to combat impunity and achieve
justice for human
rights violations in Zimbabwe and to support Zimbabweans
in exile. Lawyers
for Human Rights represented SALC and ZEF in this matter.
Ethel
Maphiwa-Ndlovu
Office Manager
Southern Africa Litigation Centre
t: +27
(0) 11 587 5000
f: +27 (0) 11 587 5099
EthelM@salc.org.za
www.southernafricalitigationcentre.org
http://www.voanews.com
May 08,
2012
Delia Robertson | Johannesburg
South Africa's high
court has ordered prosecutors to investigate Zimbabwean
officials who
alleged committed torture and human rights abuses in the
run-up to
Zimbabwe's violent and disputed 2008 elections. The decision has
important
practical, political and diplomatic implications for South Africa.
Judge
Hans Fabricius told the National Prosecuting Authority to probe
accusations
contained in a dossier of complaints compiled by the South
African
Litigation Center and the Zimbabwe Exiles Forum. Nicole Fritz of
the
Litigation Center says the complainants accuse 18 Zimbabweans of torture
and
abuse.
“One is not talking about isolated incidents, it is not one
crime," she
said. "We are talking about a huge of number of individuals who
can testify
to the same type of crime being committed against them. It is
widespread
and systematic.”
South Africa is a signatory to the 1998
Rome Statute which brought about the
International Criminal Court, and
passed implementing legislation in 2002.
Fritz says this enables South
Africa to prosecute individuals of human
rights crimes committed
elsewhere.
“That gives South African investigating and prosecuting
authorities power to
investigate and prosecute international crimes,
genocide crimes against
humanity, where the perpetrators of those crimes are
present on South
African territory after having committed such crimes,” said
Fritz.
Fritz says the complainants are members of the Movement for
Democratic
Change, who were detained when the party’s headquarters was
raided by
security officials of President Robert Mugabe’s government in
2007. She
says a number of the accused officials travel regularly to South
Africa, for
both official and personal reasons and that the local
authorities have
enough information to identify and arrest them should they
again enter the
country.
The names of the accused have not been
released and there was no immediate
comment from Zimbabwe's government or
Mugabe's ZANU-PF party.
Fritz says that, while it is preferable to secure
justice in the location in
which crimes occur, this is not possible in
Zimbabwe because the rule of law
there has collapsed and there are no
feasible or credible ways to ensure the
accused are prosecuted.
Fritz
says South Africa played a leading role in negotiating the Rome
Statute.
"South Africa was once a leader of the international criminal
justice
project; it led at the Rome negotiations in securing an independent
court,
its implementing legislation is a model the world over, for what
should be
done, and the court basically said you need to live up to the
vision of
those efforts at [the] Rome Statute and the vision that is
contained in
implementing legislation,” she said.
South Africa has also become home to
several individuals wanted in their own
countries for crimes against
humanity, and Fritz says the ruling is a
warning to those who seek to use
this country as a safe haven that they
cannot expect to enjoy impunity
here.
Prosecuting authorities in South Africa are already burdened with a
high
incidence of serious crime to investigate, and may find it difficult to
obtain the resources to investigate several hundred cases of Zimbabwean
torture.
Also, the ruling could further complicate South Africa’s
role as mediator to
the parties in the shaky coalition government in
Zimbabwe.
http://www.swradioafrica.com
By Tichaona Sibanda
08 May
2012
Stalled efforts in dealing with parked issues in the draft
constitution have
suffered another setback after ZANU PF indicated it needed
more time to
study the document.
COPAC co-chairman and MDC-T
spokesman Douglas Mwonzora said they have since
received feedback from most
stakeholders, except ZANU PF. Mwonzora revealed
that ZANU PF had initially
requested a day to go over the document, but that
period has been extended
to a week.
‘They don’t appear too happy with the contents of the
document. But we have
had good response from other stakeholders like the MDC
formations and
several key civil society organisations,’ Mwonzora
said.
He said that when he enquired from ZANU PF’s co-chairman Paul
Mangwana about
the delay, he was told that certain senior members in the
former ruling
party needed time to look at the draft.
‘Its ZANU PF
that are delaying the process and at the same time they are the
ones pushing
the country for an election and yet it’s clear they do not want
to move
forward,’ Mwonzora added.
South African based political analyst, Mutsa
Murenje, agreed with the MDC-T
MP for Nyanga North, saying Robert Mugabe’s
party are not serious at all in
seeing Zimbabwe adopt a new constitution
ahead of elections, which ZANU PF
want held this year. However it is looking
increasingly likely that the next
general elections cannot be held before
the first quarter of 2013.
‘From the word go they’ve (ZANU PF) never been
serious about power sharing.
The delay is confirmation they are not willing
to relinquish power through
the ballot box. They are quite aware that they
will lose an election under a
new constitution, when conditions are free and
fair.
‘So now they’re creating an impression that the whole constitution
is not
about the people of Zimbabwe or the future of the country. I want to
believe
they’re primarily worried about their comforts, personal
aggrandizement, as
evidenced by their policies in the last two decades,’
Murenje said.
Observers claim ZANU PF is jittery at the prospect of
Zimbabwe having a new
constitution that gives parliament more independence
and power to make key
government appointments. Under the current
constitution the President exerts
too much power and is solely responsible
for all key appointments in
government.
http://www.voanews.com/
08 May
2012
Jonga Kandemiiri | Washington
Zimbabwe's parliamentary
committee writing the nation’s new constitution is
expected to meet
Wednesday to finalize some outstanding issues as divisions
within President
Robert Mugabe's ZANU-PF threaten to delay the process.
Sources in the
committee say ZANU-PF has asked for more time to study a
draft handed to the
political parties in the unity government. President
Mugabe's party is
divided over the new constitution with hardliners pushing
for the process to
be ditched altogether.
Select committee co-chairman Douglas Mwonzora of
the Morgan Tsvangirai MDC
told VOA the meeting, originally scheduled for
Tuesday, had been postponed
due to two funerals.
ZANU-PF co-chairman
Munyaradzi Paul Mangwana was not available for comment
but Mwonzora told VOA
Studio 7 reporter Jonga Kandemiiri that Mr. Mugabe's
party is unnecessarily
delaying the constitution-making process by demanding
more time to study the
draft document.
Mwonzora says ZANU-PF is using excuses to delay the
process since it was
well-represented in the select committee right from the
beginning of the
process.
Meanwhile, the MDC co-chairman adds, major
outstanding issues such as
devolution will have to wait for the return of
management committee members
who left Harare Tuesday for Brussels to resume
dialogue talks with the
European Union.
http://www.newzimbabwe.com
08/05/2012 00:00:00
by Staff
Reporter
THE Parliamentary committee leading the country’s
constitutional reforms
(COPAC) has triggered yet another storm over
homosexuality after including
in its latest draft a clause that critics say
could be used to guarantee gay
rights.
A draft released in February
included a controversial reference to “natural
differences” which had been
rejected by the majority of Zimbabweans during
the constitutional outreach
exercise.
But the new draft released last week replaced the contested
phrase with
‘‘circumstances of birth’’ which legal experts and political
analysts said
was still open to manipulation by gay rights
activists.
Said Harare lawyer Jonathan Samukange told the Herald:
“Circumstances of
birth may include sexual orientation because those people
can actually go
to court and challenge any discrimination based on that
clause.
Vague
“That is how other countries end up having gay rights in
their
constitutions, it won’t be clearly stated for instance the South
African
constitution provides for non-discrimination and that is used by
the gays.
“This provision in our draft I think is actually intended to
cover up for
homosexuality and the moment it’s in the constitution then it
will be used
by the gays.”
Another Harare lawyer Terence Hussein
added: “The clause itself is vague,
it will need to be clarified by the
courts because someone can argue that
they were born with a particular
sexual orientation and demand that they
not be discriminated
against.
Tsholotsho North MP, Jonathan Moyo whose Zanu PF party is
opposed to the
inclusion of gay rights in the constitution said it was
scandalous that
COPAC was resorting to “trickery and deceit” in a bid to
protect
homosexuality.
Trickery
“It is scandalously revealing that
the latest Copac draft constitution
released last week has resorted to
trickery and deceit in a desperate but
ill-fated attempt to retain and
entrench homosexuality by mischievously
hiding it under the cover of a new
seemingly innocuous and yet loaded phrase
of ‘circumstances of birth’ which
has replaced the roundly rejected phrase
of ‘natural difference’ which was
controversially included in the February
Copac draft,” he
said.
“What is very offensive about this is that the people of Zimbabwe
specifically and vociferously rejected the constitutional protection of
homosexuality during the Copac outreach programme.
“The fact that
homosexuality has come back in a foolishly hidden way in the
latest draft
demonstrates beyond any doubt that the Copac co-chairs, who
have taken
ownership of the draft in the name of a negotiated consensus,
are
contemptuous of the people’s views and proves that the MDC-T, which has
been
very vocal in support of the latest draft, is fully behind the latest
sinister trick to entrench homosexuality in the Copac draft constitution
against the very clear views of the people of Zimbabwe who have spoken in
their great numbers against homosexuality.”
But former Attorney
General, Andrew Chigovere said in his view there was
nothing wrong with
clause in question.
Interpretation
“If provisions are written in such
a way that is susceptible to many
interpretations, then we may have problems
but as far as I understand this
clause, it is not about homosexuality but
the manner in which one is born,”
he said.
“We may have a situation
where one is born by an insane person and those are
the circumstances of
birth that are being talked about.
“We already have a provision for
marriage being between people of opposite
sex so it is not possible for
someone to claim that homosexuality is
provided for. The only thing gays can
do is to argue that the provision on
marriage is discriminatory in the sense
that it talks of people being of
opposite (sex).”
Zimbabwe is
currently writing a new constitution as part of a raft of
political reforms
expected to culminate in fresh elections to choose a
substantive
government.
But the critics have dismissed the process, already delayed
by constant
bickering between parties to the coalition government, as a
costly failure
with many insisting the exercise should be
abandoned.
Said Harare academic Ibbo Mandaza last week: “Copac got its
mandate
through … the Global Political Agreement (GPA) wherein the three
political
parties agreed it should lead the drafting of a new constitution
for
Zimbabwe.
“Herein lies the first problem: a political
tri-partisanship that has proved
almost fatal for Copac and in general
accounts for the incessant bickering
therein, the failure to complete work
within the stipulated 12 months and
the obscene budget of US$45
million!
“Copac has so far succeeded most in affording
constitution-making a negative
image. A laughing stock perhaps! But
Zimbabweans in general are no more
informed about constitutionality under
Copac than they were in 2000 when the
draft constitution was rejected, for
the wrong reasons, in that referendum.
“To be fair, people have become
cynical about constitution-making, let alone
about Copac.”
http://www.radiovop.com
Bulawayo, May 08, 2012 -
Zimbabwe’s draft constitution states that the
President can be prosecuted
after leaving office for human rights abuses or
any other offences committed
while serving as the country’s leader.
According to Clause 6.11 (2),
immunity against prosecution ceases after the
President leaves
office.
“(1) While in office, the President is not liable to civil or
criminal
proceedings in any court for things done or omitted to be done in
his or her
personal capacity
“(2) After leaving office as President,
civil proceedings may be instituted
against him or her for things done or
omitted to be done (a) before he or
she became President: (b) in his or her
personal capacity while he or she
was President,” the clause reads in
part.
Civic society activists have said they will lead prosecution
proceedings
against President Robert Mugabe for human rights violations
since 1980.
Civic society activists blame Mugabe for crimes against
humanity. Examples
include the 1980’s Gukurahundi massacres, the 2000 land
reform that resulted
in the killing of white commercial farmers, the 2005
clean up Murambatsvina
operation that was accompanied the destruction of
people’s property and the
2002 and 2008 violent presidential elections that
saw the displacement and
the killing of Movement for Democratic Change (MDC)
supporters.
Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai has on numerous occasions
also called for
the arrest and prosecution of those behind the Gukurahundi
campaign that
killed at least 20 000 civilians in Matabeleland and all other
violent
campaigns that resulted in the killing of his party supporters.
http://www.voanews.com
07 May
2012
Jonga Kandemiiri | Washington
The ZANU-PF party of
Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe insisted on Monday
it will not allow
European Union observers to monitor the country's next
vote, as a government
delegation readied to resume stalled dialogue with the
EU latter this
week.
The delegation leaves Harare for Brussels Tuesday hoping the
dialogue will
lead to the normalization of bilateral relations between
Zimbabwe and the
European Union.
The EU slapped President Mugabe and
some senior ZANU-PF officials and
companies with sanctions following the
disputed 2002 elections. Some have
since been removed from the
list.
Observers say the threats by Mugabe's party were meant to put
pressure on
the Europeans ahead of Thursday's talks. For relations to be
restored,
ZANU-PF insists on the lifting of the travel and financial
measures, but the
EU wants comprehensive reforms first.
The party's
parliamentary whip Joram Gumbo told VOA the EU would not be
accredited for
general elections that Mr. Mugabe has demanded this year.
Gumbo accused
the bloc of being biased against his party. But he said if the
talks
resolved the Harare-EU standoff, ZANU-PF would reconsider its
position.
University of Zimbabwe lecturer John Makumbe said ZANU-PF's
ban on EU
observers was ill advised.
The Harare delegation will be
led by Justice Minister Patrick Chinamasa,
Energy Minister Elton Mangoma and
Regional Integration Minister Priscilla
Misihairambwi-Mushonga.
http://www.iol.co.za/
May 8 2012 at 06:07pm
By SAPA
EU
foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton is to meet on Thursday with three
ministers from Zimbabwe to discuss political reforms but a further easing of
sanctions is unlikely, an EU official said on Tuesday.
EU foreign
policy chief Catherine Ashton is to meet on Thursday with three
ministers
from Zimbabwe to discuss political reforms but a further easing of
sanctions
is unlikely, an EU official said on Tuesday.
After easing sanctions
against Zimbabwe in February, the European Union aims
to express “our
encouragement of continuing political reforms”, said
Ashton's spokesman
Michael Mann.
The three ministers are from the three main political
parties in the
coalition government of President Robert Mugabe and Prime
Minister Morgan
Tsvangirai - the MDC-T, ZANU-PF and MDC-N.
In Harare,
state media last weekend quoted one of the three - Justice
Minister Patrick
Chinamasa from Mugabe's ZANU-PF - as saying the ministers
hoped the talks
would lead to the unconditional removal of remaining EU
sanctions.
But a senior EU official, speaking on condition of
anonymity, said “progress
on political reform has continued in the right
direction, but is fairly
slow”.
“The talks will give us an
opportunity to say what we are looking for and
for them to say what they are
planning,” the official added.
The other two ministers travelling to
Brussels are Energy Minister Elton
Mangoma of the MDC-T and Regional
Integration Minister Priscilla
Misihairabwi-Mushonga of the MDC-N.
In
February, the 27-nation EU removed a visa ban and asset freeze on 51 of
150
people targeted by the restrictive measures and 20 of 30 companies under
EU
sanctions imposed in 2002.
It maintained sanctions against Mugabe, who is
88 and has ruled since
independence from Britain in 1980. After failed
elections in 2008, he was
forced into a power-sharing government with his
rival Tsvangirai, a move
meant to clear the way to new polls. - Sapa-AFP
http://nehandaradio.com
May 8, 2012 7:02 pm
By Farai
Gwenhure
Confusion reigned within the Zimbabwe Media Commission after its
commissioners contradicted each other while responding to questions posed by
journalists on the issue of the establishment of a complaints board when the
voluntary media council of Zimbabwe was already in place.
Zimbabwe Media
Commission chairman Godfrey Majonga
Zimbabwe Media Commission chairman
Godfrey Majonga
Asked why the commission wanted to establish a board to
deal with complains
against journalists, when VMCZ was doing the same job,
ZMC Chairman Godfrey
Majonga put forward the idea of incorporating VMCZ in
the statutes to act as
an extension of the commission but a fellow
commissioner, Ambassador Chris
Mutsvangwa thought otherwise.
“We work
as a commission guided by the existing laws we are not legislators
who are
there to amend the Law therefore we do not see VMCZ being an
extension of
ZMC,”Mutsvangwa. Journalists who had gathered at a local hotel
to celebrate
world press freedom day attributed the contradictions in the
ZMC to the
divisions in the Government of National Unity.
A journalist from The
Zimbabwean said, ”The commissioners are political
appointees who represent
political interests of either MDC or ZANUPF
therefore it is not surprising
that they are in contrast.”
Scribes also castigated Zimpapers Chief
Executive Officer Justin Mutasa who
said there is no 100% press freedom in
any part of the world suggesting that
there was nothing surprising about the
draconian laws in Zimbabwe.
“The problem is that he has never been
arrested on accusations of criminal
defamation or any other case
criminalized by either POSA or AIPPA and some
other parts of the Criminal
Law Codification and Reform Act.
“That is why he is saying the laws
should stay just because he believes they
safeguard the so called National
interests which he is a direct beneficiary
to and therefore sees it fit to
sacrifice journalists to protect his
personal interests,” Donald Rixter
Ndlovu a freelance journalist said.
Other speakers at the function who
also opposed the idea of media self
regulation are Minister of Information
and Publicity Webster Shamu who was
guest of owner and also ZBC CEO Happison
Muchechetere.
The ZMC was formed in 2009 as a replacement to the dreaded
MIC to become the
new regulatory board in charge of registering newspapers
and accrediting
journalist as well as overseeing their operations.
http://www.newzimbabwe.com
08/05/2012 00:00:00
by
Phyllis Mbanje
AN INTERNATIONAL human rights group has written to
Zimbabwe’s three main
political party leaders urging them to scrap the death
penalty from the new
constitution.
Amnesty International says in a
letter to Zanu PF leader Robert Mugabe and
the two leaders of the MDC Morgan
Tsvangirai and Welshman Ncube that the
death penalty’s deterrent effect is
negligible.
"The death penalty was one of the most hated forms of
punishment during
Zimbabwe's liberation struggle which was applied by the
white minority
government against freedom fighters,” Amnesty said in the
letter signed by
its Zimbabwe chapter’s executive director, Cousin
Zilala.
Zilala said the death penalty was the “ultimate violation of the
right to
life”.
"One of the reasons countries retain the death
penalty is the misplaced view
that it acts as a deterrent to serious crimes,
but studies show otherwise,”
he added.
Zimbabwe’s new constitution
which is being steered by the three parties is
currently at drafting stage.
A draft released last week shows the death
penalty will be retained, but
only for aggravated murder.
But Amnesty International is urging a complete
abolition.
Zimbabwe has 61 people who are currently on death row. Since
1980, 78
prisoners have been executed by hanging, but there have been no new
executions since 2003, partly blamed on the lack of a hangman.
The last
hangman retired after executing murderous armed robbers Edmore
Masendeke and
Stephen Chidhumo.
Meanwhile, pressure is mounting on a parliamentary
committee to meet the May
target to approve a draft to be sent to a
referendum.
Paul Mangwana, who represents Zanu PF on the committee, said
the drafting
process for the new constitution had been complicated by splits
among the
three ruling coalition parties.
"It is no easy feat to
represent all parties but we are optimistic that it
will be done,” he
said.
But his optimism is not shared by a growing number of critics of
the
process.
National Constitutional Assembly chairman Lovemore
Madhuku said: “We are
wasting time and money with this COPAC. You can give
them 100 years but
nothing will come out."
Zanu PF’s Tsholotsho North
MP Jonathan Moyo said without intervention by the
leaders of the three
parties to move the process forward, the constitution
would be
stalled.
"They have been at it for 36 months, and gobbled $45million but
all they
have to show for it is an incomplete first draft. Surely, one would
have to
be an incurable optimist to think the principals will remain patient
and
keep extending the deadline," he said.
http://www.swradioafrica.com/
By Alex Bell
08 May
2012
Zimbabwe’s new school term opened this week with teachers
threatening
another round of industrial action, if the government fails to
meet their
demands by June.
The new term got under way on Tuesday and
teachers have agreed to hold off
on a countrywide strike for the next month.
They are still waiting for the
government to conduct a total review of their
salaries and working
conditions.
The start of the last school term
was marred by a nationwide strike, which
only ended when the government
agreed to pay teachers an extra US$58 and
urgently address their
needs.
But according to Takavafira Zhou, the President of the Progressive
Teachers
Union of Zimbabwe (PTUZ), there has been no further attempt to deal
with the
plight of the country’s teachers.
“Teachers returned to work
for the new term very angry and apprehensive,
because the government still
has not reviewed salaries and conditions of
service. Also, violence against
teachers has once again been on the rise and
there has been no attempt to
secure the working environment,” Zhou told SW
Radio Africa on
Tuesday.
He accused the unity government of only paying ‘lip service’ to
the demands
for better working conditions and fairer pay, saying: “There is
a lot of
politicking at the expense of resolving our problems.”
“We
will give them time to address our anger, but it seems that the only
language the government understand is one of industrial action,” Zhou
said.
He added that strike action is not what the teachers want to do,
explaining
they feel they’ve been left with little choice but to down
tools.
“Teachers are united by poverty and they believe the strike might
at least
force government to address their needs,” Zhou said.
http://www.voanews.com
07 May
2012
Marvellous Mhlanga-Nyahuye and Sithandakile Mhlanga |
Washington
Zimbabwe's Education Minister David Coltart has threatened
schools with
unspecified action if they continue to raise fees and levies
unrealistically
without consulting and agreeing with parents on the way
forward.
Most government-run boarding and day schools as well as private
ones applied
to the state to increase their fees and levies but were turned
down.
Nevertheless, they went ahead, raising the ire of cash-strapped
parents.
Some schools are reported to have raised fees by $50, while some
by as much
as $100, leading to a chorus of complaints.
Coltart told
VOA while the government is still failing to adequately fund
the education
sector, schools should not use this as an excuse to hike fees.
“I am
urging parents who are not satisfied with the fees levied at their
schools
to contact my Ministry so that investigations can be carried out to
ensure
that amounts charged are Government sanctioned, “ said Coltart.
He said
parents can also contact him using social media like Twitter,
Facebook or by
calling his offices directly, although critics have
complained of the red
tape hampering direct communication with the minister.
Zvavamwe Chambare,
a parent and chairman of Montrose Girls High School
Development Association
in Bulawayo, said parents are worried about
incessant school fee
increases.
He urged the government to subsidize fees using returns from
the country’s
abundant natural resources.
Ambrose Sibindi, organizing
secretary of the Progressive Bulawayo Residents
Association, said the
country's Basic Education Assistance Module meant to
assist disadvantaged
children should assist the needy.
He said the scheme was failing to rise
to the occasion because it was poorly
managed.
http://www.swradioafrica.com/
By Tichaona Sibanda
08 May
2012
A security detail in Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai’s office was
never
arrested or charged by the police as reported in the Herald, the
MDC-T’s MP
for Kambuzuma said on Tuesday.
The state controlled Herald
reported that police had arrested Ambitious
Muzuva of Kambuzuma Section 3,
for allegedly assaulting a police officer and
a ZANU PF sup¬porter at a
rally in Kambuzuma on Sunday.
He is employed in the security section of
Tsvangirai’s office.
But Willias Madzimure, the MDC-T legislator for the
area, denied Muzuva was
arrested, insisting that he was taken unlawfully to
the police station in
Warren Park for questioning. The MP said Muzuva was
not even present during
the party rally that was disrupted by the
police.
‘His only crime is that he’s a resident of Kambuzuma and is
linked to the
office of the Prime Minister. The only motive in that story is
to try and
tarnish our leader’s name by falsely portraying staff in his
office as
criminal elements,’ he said.
He admitted that two party
cadres, Pass¬more Jaricha and Lovemore Chimbangu,
were arrested for trying
to stop a ZANU PF supporter from infiltrating the
rally. He defended their
actions saying the ZANU PF supporters were not
welcome at their
rally.
‘Ask yourself what ZANU PF supporters were doing at our rally. The
police
were informed of their presence and took no action to disperse them.
They
only got involved when our members wanted to physically eject them at
which
time a police officer in civilian clothes was caught in the cross
fire,’
Madzimure said.
The legislator blamed the police for their
unprofessional approach when
dealing with MDC-T rallies, charging that they
allow ZANU PF supporters to
disrupt and beat up their supporters in their
presence and yet do nothing to
arrest the perpetrators.
‘In February
we had a rally that was disrupted by ZANU PF in Sunningdale in
full view of
the police. On Saturday a rally in Highfields had to be called
off following
attacks on our supporters by known ZANU PF thugs. Yet again
this happened in
full view of the police.
‘On Sunday, a rally in my constituency was
disrupted by the police after
certain ZANU PF individuals managed to cause
mayhem. These events tell you a
lot about the unprofessional conduct of the
police force.
The crackdown on the MDC in Harare by ZANU PF and the
police is increasing
as the country moves closer to elections. The former
ruling party’s leader,
Robert Mugabe, is desperate for another five-year
term as president despite
his candidature in ZANU PF causing a rift in the
party.
The ageing leader is facing the toughest electoral challenge of
his rule. In
an effort to gain greater control, his militants are forcing
people to
support the divided party. A report in The Daily News said the
former ruling
party is now divided into five factions; Joice Mujuru,
Emmerson Mnangagwa,
the military, the Mugabe faction and Generation 40,
known as the G40
faction, led by youthful cadres.
The independent
daily said on Tuesday that divisions within ZANU PF have
manifested
themselves in the form of intra-party violence, back-biting and
double
speak. It said party spokesperson Rugare Gumbo admitted that all was
not
well with the party although he insisted ‘it is not over yet for ZANU
PF.’
http://www.mdc.co.zw
The MDC notes with
resentment the arrest of an MDC official, Ambitious
Muzuva and two activists
arrested over the weekend and currently detained at
Warren Park Police
Station on allegations of assaulting a Zanu PF member and
a police officer
in Kambuzuma.
It continues to baffle the minds of Zimbabweans as they day
in and day out
witness the arrest of innocent MDC activists yet known Zanu
PF terror gangs
continue to walk scot free.
On Saturday, Shepherd
Mumba was assaulted by known Zanu PF hoodlums,Jim
Kunaka, Gochera, Pasco,
Gomwe and Moffart in Highfield but police took no
action.
The police
inaction has compelled Zimbabweans to call for security sector
reform.
29 other MDC activists are in police custody, some for almost
a year, facing
fabricated charges of murdering a Glen View policeman in May
2011.
The MDC calls upon the Inclusive Government to constitute the
Police Service
Commission so that the acting commissioner, Augustine Chihuri
is retired and
a competent Police Commissioner General
appointed.
Zimbabweans are tired of violence. The police should not
provoke the nation
into action. The people have remained calm over the years
in the forlorn
hope that such pharaohnic tendencies may subside.
The
MDC calls for professional policing.
The people’s struggle for real
change: Let’s finish it!
http://www.radiovop.com
Harare, May 08, 2012 - An international
diamond group has praised human
rights activists, Farai Maguwu, describing
him as a true hero who risked his
life to inform the world of the gross
human rights abuses in Marange and
working to protect diamond
diggers.
"He is a true human rights hero who has risked his life to
protect the
lives, freedom and human rights of diamond diggers," said Martin
Rapaport,
Chairman of the Rapaport Group.
"He is someone that every
ethical person in the diamond industry should
support, honour and emulate.
As an industry and as individuals we must stand
up and proclaim that the
sanctity of life and the human rights of diggers
are more important to us
than diamond profits. I encourage every member of
our industry to meet
Maguwu and support his goals."
A Director of the Centre for Research and
Development, Maguwu, will lead a
special session at the Rapaport Fair Trade
Jewellery Conference next month
during the JCK Las Vegas Jewellery
Show.
The Rapaport Group is an international network of companies
providing added
value services that support the development of free, fair
and competitive
global diamond markets. Established in 1978, the Rapaport
Diamond Report is
the primary source of diamond prices and market
information.
Group activities include publishing, research and marketing
services,
internet information and diamond trading networks, global rough
and polished
diamond tenders, diamond certification, quality- control,
compliance,
shipping, and financial services. Major activities of the group
include the
development of markets for Fair Trade Diamonds and Jewellery as
well as the
creation of diamond futures markets.
In May 2010,
Maguwu’s house was raided by Zimbabwean authorities and he was
arrested on
false charges after giving information to the Kimberley Process
monitor.
Despite being sent to prison and denied proper medical care for
over a
month, he emerged dedicated and committed to ensuring the rights of
Marange
diggers.
Last November Maguwu was honoured by Human Rights Watch with
the Alison Des
Forges Award for Extraordinary Activism.
His
activism has helped in relaxation of rules by government, which has so
far
allowed journalists, the Prime Minister's Office, civil society
organisations and Members of Parliament to visit the controversial diamond
fields.
http://www.dailynews.co.zw
Written by Thelma Chikwanha, Deputy News
Editor
Tuesday, 08 May 2012 12:44
HARARE - Zanu PF’s never ending
succession saga has taken a new twist with
the emergence of three more
factions joining the long-drawn battle to
replace President Robert Mugabe
when he finally leaves office.
Mugabe, fighting old age and reports
of ill-health, has fuelled the problem
by failing to appoint or groom a
successor.
He has also refused to leave the scene by claiming that he is
the only one
who binds Zanu PF together because of succession
wars.
The factions, which are linked to the youth and the military, join
other
groups such as the ones led by Vice President Joice Mujuru and Defence
minister Emmerson Mnangagwa who have for decades been tussling to outwit
each other to replace the frail 88-year-old.
Briefings to the Daily
News by top Zanu PF officials in the past three weeks
reveal that the
military has joined the fray following infighting within the
party and
realisation that it could use its huge influence on government and
Zanu PF
matters to field a replacement for Mugabe.
The highly-placed insiders say
the former ruling party is now divided into
five factions which are; the
Mujuru and Mnangagwa factions, the military,
the Mugabe faction and the
Generation 40, also known as the G40 faction led
by youthful
cadres.
In the event that Mugabe somewhat leaves office, Mujuru is
well-poised to
take over being Mugabe’s deputy in both the party and
government. But
Mnangagwa, who has always been seen as the 88-year-old’s
blue-eyed boy, has
also been eying the presidency and enjoys a close
relationship with Mugabe.
Mnangagwa, who played a pivotal role during the
disputed 2008 presidential
runoff, has in the past denied that he entered
into a gentleman’s agreement
with Mugabe to take over.
Serial
political flip-flopper Jonathan Moyo, whose previous attempt to
topple
Mugabe was botched in 2004 in what was later referred to as the
“Tsholotsho
debacle” is said to be working with both the military and G40.
The former
information minister has been fighting other Zanu PF heavyweights
using his
access to state media, where in one article he described other
faction
leaders as “riff-raff”.
“Several guys in the military are challenging the
top brass in Zanu PF. They
want to contest for political positions and they
think they have enough
backing to do so as they have academic muscle too,”
the source, who refused
to be named said.
Zimbabwe’s top military
brass, which has historical links with Zanu PF
dating back to the days of
the armed struggle, faces stiff competition from
the G40 faction that wants
to see new blood taking power.
“G40 is equally powerful because it has
young people who are hungry for
power. They have used all the tools they
have at their disposal and can
easily sway the vote. They realise that if
they do not fight for these
positions, the old guard will continue to have
it their way,” said the
source.
Youth and Empowerment minister
Saviour Kasukuwere, who is spearheading the
indigenisation campaign, is said
by sources to be at the helm of the G40
faction.
Mugabe leads the
other faction, which has loyalists such as Information
minister Webster
Shamu, minister of State in the President’s Office Didymus
Mutasa and Mines
minister Obert Mpofu among its ranks.
The divisions within Zanu PF have
manifested themselves in the form of
intra-party violence, back-biting and
double speak.
Party spokesperson Rugare Gumbo admits that all is not well
for the party
credited for ushering in independence but says it is not over
yet for Zanu
PF.
The intra-party violence is so bad that Mugabe now
feels that it might cost
his party dearly in the next election, whose date
is yet to be announced.
http://www.dailynews.co.zw
Written by Sydney Saize
Tuesday, 08 May 2012
12:59
HARARE - A tense atmosphere has engulfed Zanu PF Manicaland,
with some party
members scared to set foot on the party’s headquarters
because of potential
violence.
So deep are the differences between
faction supporters and leaders that some
senior provincial officials often
hesitate to visit party offices when
members of a different group are
present.
Officials and ordinary supporters who spoke to the Daily News
said the chaos
rocking the provincial structures made it “impossible” for
the party to
reclaim votes lost to Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai’s MDC
party in 2008.
Divisions have been simmering for long, but matters came
to a head during
district coordinating committee elections described by
party members as
riddled with violence, rigging and vote buying.
Zanu
PF Manicaland provincial chairman Mike Madiro, who was once suspended
from
the party for being part of a clandestine succession plot in 2004, has
denied rigging the elections.
The district elections are critical to
top leaders fighting a nasty
succession war to replace President Robert
Mugabe because members elected
into these committees later influence the
composition of provincial
executives.
Provincial executives wield the
power to elect Mugabe’s successor, if the
88-year-old decides to step down
or is incapacitated.
In Manicaland, Clever Muparutsa’s “election” as the
chairperson of Mutare
district ahead of Joseph Mavhiza has deepened
ruptures. Interventions by
party secretary for the commissariat Webster
Shamu, who reversed the results
of some of the DCC elections, have failed to
end the rift.
27 Zanu PF districts out of the 34 in Mutare have refused
to recognise the
election of Mparutsa.
“These are people who have
been imposed on the people by senior party
officials,” said a Zanu PF
official speaking on condition he was not named
as this would jeopardise his
position in the party.
Supporters sympathetic to Mavhiza held a
three-night vigil at the party’s
provincial offices starting on the eve of
Independence Day commemorations.
Since then Zanu PF supporters loyal to
different factions have been taking
turns to visit the party offices for
protests.
“Zanu PF has been losing its wide support base as a result of
the imposition
of candidates by the top brass. We have to put an end to this
if we want to
unite the party,” said Mavhiza on the sidelines of a night
vigil at the
party provincial offices.
As jostling for positions
within the party reaches fever pitch, numerous
faces have appeared at the
provincial offices.
These include Chimanimani East parliamentary aspirant
Joshua Sacco.
He was part of the crowd present at the party offices where
singing,
drum-beating and dancing took centre stage for days. Zanu PF
Manicaland
provincial youth chairperson Tawanda Mukodza, who is linked to
party
chairperson Madiro, has however denied any friction within party
structures.
“Zanu PF is a party of the people and our offices are there
to serve the
people. We always have our people coming to their party
offices,” said
Mukodza vehemently refusing to explain recent running battles
at the former
ruling party provincial offices.
http://www.voanews.com
08 May
2012
Gibbs Dube | Washington
Hundreds of villagers in
Zimbabwe's drought-ravaged Matabeleland and
Midlands regions have started
selling off their livestock at below-market
rates to raise money for food as
humanitarian aid agencies continue to
assess the situation on the
ground.
Starving households are now trading their cattle for between $150
and $200 a
beast, instead of the market price of around $500, just to save
their
families from hunger, VOA was told.
Some villagers revealed
they had since resorted to gold panning and other
illicit activities to
raise money for food.
A number of aid agencies stopped distributing food
handouts to the needy in
March when the harvest period set in. They are
currently assessing the
situation.
The government has since declared
five provinces in the country disaster
areas. Zimbabwe has suffered serious
food shortfalls over the past years due
to successive
droughts.
Gwanda villager Stephen Sibanda said he feared some people may
starve to
death if relief agencies did not intervene timely.
“The
situation is desperate in most parts of Gwanda South where the majority
of
people are now surviving on one meal a day,” said Sibanda.
Gwanda
lawmaker Thandeko Zinti Mnkandla said aid was needed urgently. "We
hope
non-governmental organizations will respond to the villagers' desperate
appeal for food aid," he said.
The government has a grain scheme
targeting especially the vulnerable, but
the food program has been plagued
by allegations of corruption and
politicization by loyalists of President
Robert Mugabe's Zanu PF party.
Development worker Faith Ncube said the
state food program was not reaching
the needy.
http://www.thezimbabwean.co.uk
The European Union (EU) has
availed a $2 million package to support the
Accelerated Midwifery training
programme in the country to ensure that at
least 60 percent of nurses at any
health facilities are midwives.
08.05.1201:01pm
by Leona
Mwayera
Head of EU Delegation in Zimbabwe, Aldo Dell'Ariccia said the
midwifery
programme is one of the European Commission support to the
Zimbabwean public
health sector and local people.
"As part of the
recognition for more qualitative health services the EU
decided to support
the "Accelerated Midwifery Training" programme at a cost
of $2 million to
ensure that at least 60 percent of nurses at any health
facility are
midwives," said Ariccia during the launch of Accelerated
Midwifery Training
programme at Murambinda mission hospital.
He said increase in number of
qualified midwives is expected to lead to the
reduction of martenal death,
which currently stands at 960 per 100,000 live
birth up from 555 per 100 000
live birth in 2006.
He added that the programme also aims at reducing the
peri natal death.
"Qualitative midwives are key in an effort to achieve
the Millennium
Development Goal (MDG) to reduce maternal mortality ration by
75 percent
compared to that of 1990, by 2015,"he said.
Ariccia said
qualified midwives plays a critical human right role in
providing women with
information on their rights during pregnancy and issues
related to HIV/AIDS
prevention, care and mitigation and sexual productive
health.
He said
the EU has been consistent and engaged partner of Zimbabwe in the
health
sector for more than 10 years.
"We enjoyed a very close collaboration
with the Ministry of Health even
during difficult times, when the health
system was near to collapse and our
focus moved to responding to vital short
term health needs rather than
contributing to overall sector development,"he
said.
He went on to say the EU has been playing a critical role in the
training
and retention of human resources in the country`s health
sector.
"In particular, considering the high vacancy rate especially
among nurses
and environmental staff we supported the Ministry of Health and
Child
Welfare in the training and retaining of primary care nurses and
Environmental health assistants as well as other critical staff of health
system," he said.
He added that the country`s health sector was
progressing towards
stabilization and there was need to look at more
qualitative health service
for the population, especially the most in need,
the women and their
children.
Ariccia encouraged midwives to continue
with their sterling work in reducing
the unnecessary deaths of mothers and
babies, in particular in rural areas
where health facilities are usually
limited.
"To further contribute to battle to the battle in reducing
maternal
mortality, the EU is also contributing to the revitalization of the
Maternity Waiting homes in hospital, an intervention that will be
implemented jointly with UNFPA,"said Ariccia.
There are 17 primary
Care Nurses Training Schools that are taking part in
the EU sponsored
training programme to Up-skill primary care nurses in
obstetric and
maternity care. These include government and mission
hospitals. The schools
are located in all the eight rural provinces of the
country.
http://www.esi-africa.com
8 May 2012 - The
president of Zimbabwe’s Chamber of Mines, Winston Chitando,
says that the
body is in discussions with Zesa Holdings on electricity
supply and is
hoping to come up with a framework conducive to the
development of mining in
the country.
Erratic power supplies have continued to affect production
in the mining
sector, and puts projected growth in the sector of 15.5% under
threat.
Platinum mining firms Mimosa and Zimplats recently advanced US$10
million to
Zesa to enable it to settle part of its debts and ensure
guaranteed
uninterrupted power supply.
Chitando says negotiations are
ongoing with Zesa subsidiaries Zimbabwe Power
Company and Zimbabwe
Electricity Transmission Distribution Company to arrive
at an agreed tariff
for ring fenced customers.
During 2011 an average of 1,105 MW was
realised within Zimbabwe’s power
generation against an envisaged capacity of
1,600 MW. An increased output of
1,244 MW is envisaged for 2012 compared to
demand of 2,200 MW required to
service all the sectors of the country’s
economy.
http://www.miningreview.com
Harare, Zimbabwe --- 08 May 2012 -
The government of Zimbabwe is expected to
have concluded the transfer of
majority stakes in foreign-owned mining
companies to locals by the end of
the month.
Foreign firms operating in Zimbabwe are required to sell a
controlling 51%
stake to indigenous Zimbabweans or State-approved
agencies.
Daily newspaper “The Herald” reports that national
indigenisation and
economic empowerment board (NIEEB) general manager
Zwelibanzi Lunga told
Bloomberg’s online publication that mostly Chinese and
Asian mining
companies had complied with the law.
According to
statistics released by NIEEB, 260 companies had submitted
transfer plans to
the government, with 69 approved, 14 rejected and 177
still
pending.
“The Government will invoke penalty provisions, such as
cancellation of
operating licences, if companies don’t comply,’’ said
Lunga.
He added that 15 companies had been given approval for community
share
ownership trusts and employee share ownership plans, which resulted in
mining firms ceding 10% each to the community and employees.
Zimbabwe
Platinum Mines, Mimosa and Anglo Platinum have already launched
their
employee share option schemes and community share ownership
schemes.
Chamber of Mines of Zimbabwe president Winston Chitando told
journalists
that equity laws were “company specific”.
He said
negotiations between the government and individual companies were
continuing
and that both parties would reach an agreement. “We have not
received a
directive from government that all mining companies should cede
51%, but we
understand that it is company specific,” said Chitando.
Impala Platinum
Holdings Limited, the world’s second-largest producer of the
metal, agreed
in principle in March to sell 31% of its Zimplats unit to
NIEEB and 20% to
employees and communities. Impala owns 87% of Zimplats.
Aquarius
Platinum, which owned the Mimosa Platinum Mine with Impala,
submitted a
proposal to hand over control of the operation to Zimbabwe,
which accepted
the plan.
Source: “The Herald” newspaper. For more information, click
here.
http://www.zimbabwejournalists.com
8th
May 2012 18:15 GMT
By Chenjerai
Chitsaru
ONE critic of the government’s indigenisation and empowerment
drive says if
it is represented by the ownership of the commuter omnibus
sector: “Count me
out.”
This entirely indigenous sector is
shamelessly chaotic and riddled with
corruption which, some critics say, has
sucked in the police – at every
level.
If that is the fate of the
programme, says another critic: “Heaven help us!”
Some time last year,
there was a flurry of debate in he media on the future
of the commuter bus
sector: was it worth the bother at all? A proposal that
it be abolished
altogether seemed to gather momentum.
But it fizzled out as the alleged
major beneficiaries of the sector gave
that proposal the thumbs-down. There
was much speculation on the identity of
the sector’s supporters: were they
not mostly politicians from the former
ruling party?
Although there
has never been any conclusive evidence that the sector is ”untouchable”
because many “chefs” have a stake in it, the allegation persists. They would
not be stupid enough to register ownership in their own names. There are
ways in which they could use relatives as their “fronts”.
Some of the
sector’s impunity is breath-taking. Their absolute disregard of
the rules of
the road can be amazing. The roadworthiness of the vehicles is
always
suspect, which has apparently raised the number of police road blocks
all
over the country.
That, according to some cynics, has created another
racket – this one
involving the traffic police. The so-called “spot fines”
for offences are
believed to be fattening the pockets of the police – not of
the Treasury.
It’s probably contentious to infer that any indigenization
and empowerment
programme in Zimbabwe would not be immune from the
corruption cancer. That
there is corruption in high places cannot be
disputed. There are top people
mentioned routinely in such corruption-ridden
activities as the Chiadzwa
diamond operations in Marange in Manicaland
province.
The tollgate operations on many highways are said to be riddled
with
corruption: one or two officers have been brought to court. Millions of
dollars are involved. Someone is making a killing and it is not the small
fry operating a shoestring racket in the ghettos. There are mostly big names
involved.
For this reason, most people fear that the programme will
turn out to be
another racket – dominated by the chefs or their “fronts”.
Some people
quote Nigeria as an example. Others suspect that the Zimbabwean
leadership
is incapable of tackling corruption in high places with the
decisiveness
recently used by the Tanzanians: cabinet ministers were named
and shamed and
were due to get the boot.
The programme is itself
unquestionably noble: the indigenous people, for so
long marginalised by the
colonialists, have a chance to prove their mettle
as entrepreneurs of
distinction. In the years shortly after independence,
some of them tried but
the domination of the whites was formidable.
Also, there appears to have
been – by the reckoning of many neutral
observers – an unwritten requirement
for success: you had to owe some form
of allegiance to the ruling party, or
things would not go right for you –
however brilliant you turned out to be
as an entrepreneur.
Two young people, now deceased – Lupi Mushayakarara
and Samuel Gozo – come
to mind, as examples. They encountered difficulties
more political than
anything else.
Under colonialism, sterling
efforts were made by a number of Africans to
carve out a niche for
themselves in entrepreneurship. In Harare township
itself there were such
notable achievers as Barnabas Mkwedeya, a
photographer, Kawadza, a
merchanic, Dausi, M’nyanda and Moffat, who ran
grocery shops - successfully
too
At the huge Musika itself, Naison Mhlanga ran a thriving butchery. Of
course, nobody ventured into the “European” sector – the laws were vintage
racism: Africans would mix with Europeans only as their servants and
workers.
Charles Mzingeli, a vocal critic of the racist policies, ran
a shop at the
huge market. In his spare time, he held forth on how Africans
could fight
this racism. He is credited with firing the political awareness
of many
African nationalists..
In every African country that has
achieved independence from colonialism,
the battle to crush the economic
domination of the whites has proved more
intractable than the political one.
Understandably, the colonialists would
not vacate that domination without a
fight, literally, to the finish.
In most instances, the whites left the
country, rather than cede their
privileged positions, and have their
enterprises taken over by the blacks.
There was emphatic racism – then
called, rather graphically, the colour bar:
the whole citadel of colonialism
was built on racism. Moreover, the
colonialists were so reluctant to give up
their economic domination, they
did little to help the “natives” acquire the
skills and expertise to make
the takeover a profitable success - to
themselves individually and to the
country’s economy..
So, in most
instances, the reluctance of the former colonialists poisoned
the chances of
a smooth transition. In the three former members of the
abortive federation,
the economies suffered terribly in the early days of
independence. To
forestall any upheavals occasioned by massive unemployment
and food
shortages, the governments all chose a political path designed to
frighten
all opposition: the one-party system.
The trade unions, allies of the
political parties during the struggle, were
particular targets of
persecution. Unfortunately for the politicians, the
people in general
rallied behind the unions. In Zambia, the shift was so
pronounced the union
leaders eventually replaced the political party which
claimed to have
single-handedly fought for independence.
In Zimbabwe, it took some time,
but the union movement eventually subdued
the political party to the extent
that they were virtually invited to join
the government, a strategy designed
to forestall the inevitable – the
outright electoral victory of the
union-backed political party.
In Malawi, Kamuzu Banda, blind to all pleas
for a chance in direction from
his one-party one-man rule, was beaten
hands-down in an election, the people
rejecting his party for its lack of
sympathy for the working class.
In fact, all over Africa, after
independence, indigenisation was the way
forward. In Nigeria and a few other
Western and North African countries,
high levels of corruption followed the
shift to indigenous ownership of
business and government. The soldiers came
into the picture, mostly to claim
their share of the pickings from
corruption.
Many critics have suggested that if African governments had
been more
circumspect in their takeover of the economies from the former
colonialists,
an entirely different and profitable economic dispensation
might have
ensued.
Moreover, the unbridled greed of the politicians
meant that the ordinary
people were subjected to terror to subdue their
agitation against the
immoral plunder of the country’s resources by the
minority
There ought to be an attempt to catalogue some of these
disasters, none of
them precipitated by foreigners, but by the greed of the
indigenous
politicians.
So, the immediate threat to the economies
which are being prepared for
indigenization is entirely indigenous too. If
the programme are as hurriedly
implemented as some of the hare-brained as
were some of the first
“development plans” - launched, not for the benefit
of ameliorating the
economy - but as political targets dressed up in
economic disguise, only
disaster can result.
Corruption has plagued
many countries – new and old. At the end of
communism, the former Soviet
Union’s largest component, the Russian
Federation, was and is still plagued
by a level of corruption reminiscent of
the typical “banana republics” of
South America.
Vladimir Putin, a former KGB supreme, is said to have used
a patronage of
sorts to hang on to power. His partners are the so-called
“oligarchs”.
India and China have fared no better. The third and fourth
members of the
BRICS group – Brazil and South Africa –have had their
problems with graft.
The problem seems to be a failure to work on a
blueprint that all
participant s have agreed upon.
In Zimbabwe, there
is absolutely no general agreement that the Zanu
PF-created indigenisation
and empowerment laws are any good for the
population at large. This is
particularly so since the suspicion abroad is
that Zanu PF is using the
programme to garner votes for any election.
Zanu PF may claim it is
sincere and honest in applying itself so zealously.
But its record of
political probity has been in tatters for years. Moreover,
it has not yet
shaken off the reputation of being a corrupt party, enshrined
in its slogan,
Tambawakachenjera, which could be translated in English as
“keep your cards
close to your chest”.
Getting the MDC formations to look at a blueprint
that would meet their
absolute approval would help. But this would take a
big leap of faith for
Zanu PF.
Clifford Chitupa Mashiri, 8th May 2012
Zimbabweans hope that the
planned visit to Zimbabwe by the UN Human Rights
Commissioner Navi Pillay
will help put the country’s human rights record
under the
spotlight.
During her five-day visit starting on 20 May, Mrs Pillay is
expected to pile
pressure on Mugabe to account for rights violations and to
reform ahead of
the UN Secretary General’s expected visit in August 2013 for
UNWTO.
The public is anxious on which rights abuses will feature in Mrs
Navi Pillay’s
engagement with the Zanu-pf leader, Robert Mugabe given an
ever-growing list
of military operations and reluctance to implement the
Global Political
Agreement.
Of major concern is the regime’s lack of
remorse for rights violations
during Gukurahundi, ‘Jambanja’ (the bloody
farm seizures), Murambatsvina,
Hakudzokwi and Makavhotera Papi and election
2008 political violence.
While Mugabe’s decision to ratify the 28-year
old United Nations Convention
Against Torture (CAT) is commendable, however,
his ‘Damascus Moment’ is
suspect as it arguably suggests he is only after
the safeguards in the
convention before his rule comes to an end.
It
is one thing to agree to be bound by a convention, and another to
implement
it because there is need for political will.
Sadly, the lack of political
will manifests itself in many ways including
failure to account for the
whereabouts of human rights activist Paul Chizuze
who mysteriously went
missing a month ago.
So is the delayed enactment of the Human Rights
Commission Bill with a
mandate to investigate pre-2009 rights violations as
opposed to only
post-2009 incidents as proposed by
Zanu-pf.
Furthermore, there is reluctance to investigate the alleged
military-run
torture camps at Chiadzwa which were exposed by BBC Panorama in
August 2011.
Mugabe stands accused of applying the rule of law
selectively, whereby 29
opposition activists have been on remand in a
maximum security prison for
nearly a year for the alleged murder of a
policeman, whereas six police
officers accused of fatally assaulting a
mineworker in Shamva were released
on US$50 bail within a week.
In
spite of these and other rights abuses, all opposition parties and their
leaders have been ineffectual in getting Zanu-pf and Mugabe to observe the
rule of law in its conventional sense.
Obviously, Mrs Pillay would be
expected to also raise the issue of the SADC
Tribunal which was arguably
sabotaged by the Mugabe regime – to frustrate
white commercial farmers from
getting compensation.
Zimbabweans expect the international community to
insist that the lifting of
targeted sanctions on Mugabe and his allies be
conditional on the holding of
peaceful at least UN-supervised free and fair
elections preceded by key
reforms including security sector, media and
electoral reforms, the
revamping of the voters roll and the adoption of a
new constitution in a
peaceful referendum.
Although Mugabe cannot
afford to alienate the United Nations entirely, he
has however, carefully
‘cherry picked’ the priorities of any association
with the world
body.
For instance, the Zanu-pf leader has to date attended all annual
General
Assembly sessions in New York since the 1980s but expelled a UN
torture
expert, snubbed UN election funding, turned down UN food assistance
in 2005
and shot down Tibaijuka’s critical report on
Murambatsvina.
The regime has also resisted opposition demands for a
probe to ascertain the
architects of the widely condemned Murambatsvina
amidst revelations it was
designed by the CIO. Instead, the regime embarked
on a witch hunt.
Reports say prominent academic and publisher Dr Ibbo
Mandaza was grilled on
2 August 2005 by state security agents for allegedly
writing the damning UN
report on Operation Murambatsvina which exposed
government to international
criticism (Zimbabwe Independent,
07/10/05).
It remains to be seen how the regime will handle the UN rights
envoy’s
visit, her findings and recommendations. A question on every
person’s mind
is “Will there be victimisation after the UN envoy’s departure
for blowing
the whistle on Mugabe’s rights abuses?”
Clifford Chitupa
Mashiri, Political Analyst, London,
zimanalysis2009@gmail.com