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Zim to probe fresh land grabs

http://www.mg.co.za

HARARE, ZIMBABWE Apr 16 2009 14:47

Zimbabwe's deputy premier Arthur Mutambara said on Thursday a team of top
officials from the unity government was launching an investigation into
fresh seizures of white-owned farms.

"Tomorrow we are going to the farms to see for ourselves," Mutambara told
journalists.

"A cross-party team is going to the farms to understand what's happening and
take action. We are trying to quickly address this political hygiene matter.
It's a matter of life and death."

Since Zimbabwe's unity government formed in February, white farmers have
reported a surge in violence on their lands despite a power-sharing deal
between long-time President Robert Mugabe and new Prime Minister Morgan
Tsvangirai.

Mutambara had earlier met US ambassador James McGee who expressed concern
over the farm violence.

Tsvangirai's spokesperson James Maridadi said the premier had tasked
Mutambara with leading the probe into farm disruptions.

Tsvangirai last month decried the fresh wave of farm invasions across the
country and warned that those responsible for the farm disruptions risked
arrest.

Mugabe, however, has insisted that his controversial land reforms would
continue.

The land reforms launched in 2000 aimed to resettle black people on 4 000
white-owned commercial farms, but the process was marred by politically
charged violence.

The scheme has drastically reduced agricultural production, which once
accounted for 40% of the economy, as most of its beneficiaries lacked both
farming equipment and expertise.

While a decade ago Zimbabwe produced enough maize to feed the nation and
export a surplus, now more than half its people are estimated to need food
aid.

Zimbabwe's new government wants to attract foreign investment and trade, but
major donors have proved reluctant to open their wallets, in part because of
the ongoing farm violence.

Mutambara said he had urged the United States to end the sanctions on Mugabe
and his inner circle, which include a travel ban and asset freeze, but also
block global lenders like the International Monetary Fund from offering
financing to the government.

"There is no efficacy, no meaning anymore in the targeted sanctions,"
Mutambara told journalists after meeting McGee.

"There are still outstanding issues to do with fresh farm invasions, the
rule of law. We told McGee that we are determined to resolve all the
outstanding issues. Why don't you give us a fighting chance?"

The US imposed the sanctions on Mugabe and elite members of his Zanu-PF
party in 2002 following controversial presidential elections which the
opposition and Western diplomats charged were rigged to help Mugabe retain
power.

Since forming the unity government, Zimbabwean leaders have argued that the
sanctions have outlived their usefulness as the country is trying to raise
more than $8-billion to revive the moribund economy.

Mutambara called on the US to restore balance of payments support and credit
lines to Zimbabwe's new government, but admitted that the government still
needs to do more to clean up its record.

"We must stop imposing sanctions on ourselves by fresh farm invasions and
disregarding court orders," Mutambara said.

"I am saying we are guilty as charged on this account. We are saying the
transgressions are not insurmountable. What I promised was that this
government will do all it can to resolve these matters. -- Sapa-AFP


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Coalition Executive hold inaugural meeting

http://www.swradioafrica.com

By Violet Gonda
16 April 2009

Since the formation of the coalition government the MDC has been running
around trying to put out fires created by ZANU PF, but Robert Mugabe has
been consistent from the very beginning in making unilateral decisions such
as the appointment of permanent secretaries and governors. He has also
refused to budge on the issue of the appointments of the Reserve Bank
Governor Gideon Gono and Attorney General Johannes Tomana, despite the two
MDC formations insisting that the appointments were irregular.

Prime Minister Tsvangirai had resolved to discuss the outstanding issues of
the Global Political Agreement in March, but suffered a tragic setback when
he was involved in a car accident which killed his wife, Susan. When he
returned to work at the beginning of April a meeting had been scheduled, but
again had to be postponed over yet another tragedy - the death of his 3 year
old grandson who drowned in the swimming pool at his Harare home.

It was reported that the principals would finally meet on Thursday, to
thrash out the outstanding issues. According to James Maridadi, the Prime
Minister's spokesperson, Thursday did see a closed door meeting of the top
six executive members, but apparently no substantive issues were discussed.

Maridadi said this was just the inaugural meeting of the Government
Executive Committee, comprising Mugabe and his two Deputies (Joice Mujuru
and Joseph Msika), plus Tsvangirai and his Deputies (Thokozani Khupe and
Arthur Mutambara).  Maridadi said the meeting was aimed at setting the
'ground rules' of how the top six should operate and allocate
responsibilities. He gave no other information as to how responsibilities
were actually allocated.

It is understood the three principals - Mugabe, Tsvangirai and Mutambara -
are expected to finally meet on Friday to discuss the outstanding issues of
the GPA. The main items on the agenda are the freeing of the media; the
catastrophic land invasions; the controversial appointments of governors,
permanent secretaries and ambassadors; the swearing in of Roy Bennett, the
MDC Deputy Minister of Agriculture designate and also the controversy over
Nelson Chamisa's Ministry, which had the department of communications
stripped from it's mandate by Mugabe last week.

MDC sources, speaking on condition of anonymity, say the Prime Minister is
expected to put his foot down and demand that all outstanding issues must be
resolved by the end of April. It is not clear what will happen if Mugabe
fails to meet that deadline and he has a long history of not responding well
to ultimatums. Tsvangirai has also a long history of not following up on his
own deadlines.

Observers widely believe that the behaviour of ZANU PF since the inclusive
government clearly shows that the Mugabe regime is still not interested in
the welfare of the country, but is only interested in securing its own
interests.  The only issues they seem to want to focus on are the end to the
targeted sanctions against Mugabe and the ruling party chefs and trying to
pressure the international community to provide billions of dollars, with no
accountability.

Many frustrated Zimbabweans are wondering why the MDC did not put its foot
down at the beginning and demand immediate action over the more important
key crises which are crippling the country. Murders are still taking place
on farms, but there appears to be no real move to deal with this.

After months of violent farm invasions, the Prime Minister has appointed a
ministerial taskforce to probe disruptions on farms. Maridadi said the team,
which will be led by Arthur Mutambara, comprises Ministers Kembo Mohadi and
Giles Mutsekwa of Home Affairs, Joseph Made the Agriculture Minister,
Herbert Murerwa, Minister of Lands and Gorden Moyo, Minister of State in the
Prime Minister's Office.

"This probe has been necessitated by recent reports of fresh farm invasions
just days before the start of the winter wheat season. The team will,
tomorrow Friday 17 April 2009, make unannounced appearances on three
affected farms. Findings will be presented to the Prime Minister on Monday
20 April 2009."

ZANU PF has insisted there is no such thing as farm invasions taking place,
and it is just the problem of white commercial farmers refusing to leave
farms 'acquired' for resettlement by the government.

Mutambara has in the past been quoted as saying, 'the land reform is
irreversible, there is no going back on our revolution.' Meanwhile, the
Ministers of Lands and Agriculture have been completely supportive of what
have been extremely violent invasions and wide scale theft, so it is
unlikely this committee can be genuinely effective.


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Hot Seat: George Bizos, Minister Sekai Holland, Glen Mpani & Mary Ndlovu

 
http://www.swradioafrica.com/pages/hotseat160409.htm
 
 

SW Radio Africa Transcript

HOT SEAT teleconference: Journalist Violet Gonda interviews George Bizos, Sekai Holland, Glen Mpani and Mary Ndlovu – reconciliation, justice and national healing debate   

Broadcast 10 April 2009

VIOLET GONDA: My guests on the Hot Seat programme are distinguished South African human rights advocate George Bizos, Amai Sekai Holland who’s the Minister of State responsible for National Healing and Reconciliation, Glen Mpani the regional co-ordinator for the Centre for the Study of Violence and Reconciliation, and Mary Ndlovu a social justice activist working with WOZA - the Women of Zimbabwe Arise.

Now Zimbabwe, since 1960 has experienced high levels of human rights abuses dating from the Smith regime to the Matabeleland period to the current phase where individuals have disappeared, while some have been tortured and murdered.

However the country has not addressed the challenge of addressing past wounds and holding individuals responsible to account. In this programme we discuss the commitment by the inclusive government in Zimbabwe to institute a process of

Clockwise from top left: Glen Mpani, Mary Ndlovu George Bizos, and Sekai Holland.
national healing and reconciliation, and I’ll start with Amai Sekai Holland, who is the Minister of State responsible for National Healing and Reconciliation. Amai Holland, what are your terms of reference first of all?

SEKAI HOLLAND : Can I just correct you – there are three Ministers of State, there is myself from MDC T, there is Minister John Nkomo from Zanu-PF and Minister Gibson Sibanda from MDC Mutambara. The three of us are in the process of setting up an organ for national healing, reconciliation and integration of Zimbabwean society. It’s going to be an independent body; it’s not going to be a ministry. We are at the moment really intensely engaged in, not just talking among ourselves the three of us; we are meeting a lot of organisations and individuals. Our terms of reference are to establish an organ of national healing, reconciliation and integration of Zimbabwean society.

GONDA : When is this organ going to be established?

HOLLAND : We are at the moment at the point where we are going to have a launch just as we had of the STERP, the Short Term Economic Recovery Plan. We are going to have a launch; after the launch we hope that we are then able to set up our secretariat and that a whole lot of activities will start. The establishment is not going to be done at the top level; our role will be to work within the Global Political Agreement which tells us exactly what to do and our role will really be what every body like ours will be doing - which is to co-ordinate, which is really to just see what progress is being made and it is to guide, it is not to do. So when you say when is it going to be established, it is in the process of being established but it is going to be launched. And then people in Zimbabwe and Zimbabweans outside Zimbabwe who have an interest in participating will be able to actually come in with much of the programming.

GONDA: Right, let me go to Mary Ndlovu. The appointment of Ministers of National Healing as we’ve just heard from Amai Holland, what does it signify first of all and secondly what benefit will emerge from this in your view?

MARY NDLOVU: Well I would first want to ask some questions of Amai Holland. One is, is this simply for reconciliation or is it to institute a complete transitional justice process? And the second question; is what mechanisms will be set up to consult with ordinary people on the ground as to what kind of process they would like to have?

GONDA: OK, Amai Holland, are you able to answer that right away?

HOLLAND : I’ll answer number two first. Our vision is to actually take an all-inclusive approach that is grassrootsbased, that will be guided by Zimbabweans. That’s the approach we are taking. On what mechanism will be set up, the people will decide.

GONDA: Mary?

NDLOVU: Yes, OK, I was just wondering what mechanism to consult the people, to find out what they want?

HOLLAND : At Independence in 1980, I think you were in Zimbabwe ?

NDLOVU: Yes.

HOLLAND : There was a lot of consultation done in terms of a whole lot of range of change of direction from what Smith did to what the new government was going to do and there was a multiplicity of tools that were used to really get the legal framework, to get the institutional framework set. I think that if Zimbabweans would really want to take this head-on, we are going to have at hand a very wide consultative process. It depends on whether people are ready to participate or not.

GONDA: We will come to that to find out what people want and if people are ready for that, but Mary now could you answer my earlier questions – what does this signify and what benefit will emerge from this in your view?

NDLOVU: Well I think it is a very important process and it’s a very necessary process that we heal before we can move ahead to build or as we move ahead to build the future, but it’s not a simple thing and it’s going to take time. And one issue we’re concerned about is how we work ahead with healing and reconciliation when we’ve got some of the perpetrators of abuses still in place, people who are still arresting members of WOZA for example, the same people are there. So how are we going to start discussing reconciliation when we see those same people in their places?

GONDA: From what you have seen, is there political will now by both political parties to address the wrongs of the past, not just what has happened now, but even the wrongs of the past during Gukurahundi, to uncover the truth and move the country forward?

NDLOVU: From what I have seen, there is no will on the part of Zanu-PF to undertake that process.

GONDA: Glen, you were in Zimbabwe recently, do people feel safe to talk about this right now?

GLEN MPANI: Thank you so much Violet. I think that it’s very difficult for me to make a general perspective on what Zimbabweans really feel in terms of discussing these issues. But if Amai Sekai Holland is saying that they are going to be providing space for Zimbabweans to debate this, the issues that come into my mind is what sort of framework is going to be put in place, considering that our media in Zimbabwe is still constricted in such a way that the people cannot be able to participate broadly. Secondly, the other issue is have the people of Zimbabwe been put through a process where they now have a sense of urgency considering that in the last couple of years it has been very, very difficult to group Zimbabweans to come together and be able to debate these issues without fear, considering that some of the individuals, like what Mary is saying, are still moving around in the communities where they perpetrated such high levels of violence.

So I think there is a huge challenge for this mechanism that is going to come in; one to build confidence that whatever process they are going to go through, it is a real process which is not going to lead to a further backlash on them as individuals. So I think it is a matter of time, it’s not one thing that can happen overnight, but I think that process is going to take a lot of effort and confidence building, not only from the political leadership who are guiding this process but even local leadership, grassroots leadership would need to take a very pivotal role in this process.

GONDA: Yes, but from just the conversations you have been having with people on the ground, even if it’s just a small group, what are people saying so far about this?

MPANI: I think there is a huge gap that is there. I think the leadership at the top have been able to make some milestones in terms of them coming together and striking a common agenda in terms of how to work together but there is a disjuncture with what is happening at the top and what is on the ground. That is why we are having, now hearing some cases of, incidents of violence that are taking place in pockets of Zimbabwe across the country. That is why we are hearing even cases that are taking place where people don’t really feel that there is a healing process or there is an inclusive government that is in place. So what is transpiring at the top needs to take place at the bottom and I think that is a huge challenge.

GONDA: Now let me go to Advocate Bizos who sat on the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission. Now Advocate, who should drive a process of national healing and reconciliation first of all?


GEORGE BIZOS: Well I have heard the persons that have already spoken, they are Zimbabweans, they have to find a way. I can only speak of the South African experience and it sounded as difficult for us in the early 90’s whilst we were talking about a new constitution and what was going to happen to perpetrators of atrocious crimes for political ends, for the achievement of political objectives. The way we did it was to have a provision in the constitution that there will be amnesty, not for the asking but there were certain preconditions; the most important of which was that you had to tell the truth - the whole truth. And that you had to have committed the unlawful act for the gain of some political objective on behalf of a known political body, albeit government or opposition. The details were left to be worked out in legislation to be passed by the would-be elected government - which happened.

We were very fortunate to have had the leadership of Archbishop Tutu and other people of a high profile who enjoyed the confidence of the majority of the people in the country, but seven and a half thousand people applied for amnesty; less than half were granted the amnesty. Those who asked for amnesty and were not granted were liable to prosecution for the crimes that they confessed to but there was a provision that the evidence that they gave could not be used against them.

The issue really is a difficult one because victims cry out for justice and amnesty is something short of it, but if a country is to look to the future of its people, it is an agreement not to do justice in its ordinary sense, but what we would call transformative justice - in order to transform the society, in order to have unity and have some progress in human rights terms, economic advancement and reconciliation.

On balance it worked out although some of the victims are dissatisfied because it wasn’t the complete process and they are complaining about the absence of some sort of compensation for their loss. So but on balance, we were not likely to have had a settlement between the apartheid regime and the liberation movement if we did not agree to this amnesty procedure.

GONDA: I was going to ask about that; could a blanket amnesty have healed the nation?

BIZOS: The representatives of the apartheid regime wanted blanket amnesty but the liberation movement, particularly the African National Congress insisted that it should not be so, but also had to agree that what was to happen to the apartheid regime offenders was to happen to the liberation movement members. Something that was a little hard to swallow by the liberation movement because it was claimed that the apartheid regime was an illegitimate regime whereas the liberation movement was fighting a just war so to speak.

GONDA: Amai Holland, of late we have heard or seen the president, we’ve seen the prime minister imploring Zimbabweans to forgive and forget and yet over the last few weeks we have also seen an escalation of incidents of violence as MDC supporters revenge, as they seek to regain property that they lost during the last elections. What do you make of those developments?

HOLLAND : Actually Violet, I think I should really go back to saying to you that I don’t want us to take this interview in a void. We have got a Global Political Agreement which stands on four legs. We have the democratisation process, we’ve got the leg where we would like to actually deal comprehensively with the humanitarian crisis, we’ve got the process where we’ve got the economic stabilisation process - which we now have STERP to do that in - and the fourth one is the national healing. The Global Political Agreement is a comprehensive document and you need to put national healing in that framework. You can’t talk about national healing outside the framework of the GPA.

Article Seven of the GPA begins a discussion on a process of national healing. Article Seven notes that the new government shall give consideration to the setting up of a mechanism to properly advice on what measures might be necessary and practicable to achieve national healing, cohesion and unity in respect of victims of pre and post independence political conflict. That’s the first point I want to make.

The second point I want to make is this, that if you take the debate at the level you are trying to take it now, where we discuss what is happening now outside the Global Political Agreement, we are actually going to miss the boat, the way we did in 1980 - when a policy on reconciliation was declared, admired by everybody but nobody in the NGO community, in the Churches, anywhere tried to understand what that basically could translate into nation building. What we are doing right now with the opportunity we have is to work within the political framework that we have been given to ensure an all-inclusive process, where we are working with the other ministries that are involved in also fulfilling the GPA.

It is not easy in Zimbabwe as we stand right now. When Tsvangirai came back and started to discuss with us the issue on whether we would go into the agreement as these things stood or not. We had very serious debates and discussions on our own personal views to how we would move forward. When we agreed to get involved in the GPA and sign, although there had been big differences before in discussing what we would do, we eventually at the national executive level reached a consensus. There was a consensus in the national council. There were ten provinces for and two against. Now, once we agreed to go in, we made the decision that we would actually fight to open democratic space inside. We are inside now.

We are actually facing the most daunting situations but we are fighting to open this democratic space. And we are fighting to ensure that what brought us to where we are is understood. With MDC , in March 2006, we had a congress; we agreed that we would force a situation in the country where we would use non-violent methods to bring Mugabe to the negotiating table. We finally did. The negotiations were a result of the March 11 2007 beatings of us.

The SADC countries decided to force a situation where Zimbabweans would talk about talks and have them. The result we have is not very good but we are inside now and in the short time we have been inside, those that actually see the sense of fighting from inside are organising themselves inside Zimbabwe to ensure that the GPA works.

My appeal to everybody Violet, would be people talking with people inside, who are involved in doing things inside, how to get this to work. I thought that maybe I would share some things with you of how we are achieving some of the things that may be showing results.

In our own unit we have achieved three things already. The first one is that we have got a date when we are going to launch. The second one is that we have got an idea of how we can actually get an inclusive process – the problem in Zimbabwe is that individuals, organisations and groups believe in their own individual state that they actually have the answer for everybody. What we need to understand as Zimbabweans is that each one of us has a piece of the answer and that we need to start working together. The situation is very difficult in terms of security; we now have Giles Mutsekwa in Home Affairs, he is fighting there to get certain changes made where we will actually be able to make some progress in the way that we do get our consultations going.

I don’t mind people being sceptical and really saying what can we do and trying things out for us but the most destructive thing that we Zimbabweans tend to do is to pour water on potential things that could work and ensure that things simply don’t work. I’m asking for people to look at the GPA, talk about national healing as a part of totality, that’s how this was designed and to see that it has been a very broad achievement by the GPA to include the whole issue which was left out in 1980 of national healing, of reconciliation and integration of Zimbabwean society. If people have an understanding as to how this can be improved, when the launch is done, the opportunities for people to come and do the work in the best way they can, we will be open. And the launch we are hoping will be in the next two weeks.

GONDA: But Amai Holland, this is what the politicians, you as politicians are organising right now, but on the ground the situation is still different, so I go back to my earlier question – how are you dealing with all the other problems that are continuing, you know, on the ground?

HOLLAND : OK, in Buhera we were there today, there were 12 to 15 people who are MDC who were arrested after the police had told the people who took things from MDC people - they were told to return them, the things were returned. However we are told that a couple of days ago, people from the army went to the MDC people who had received their things back, took those things back to the Zanu-PF people and arrested the 12 people. This issue has now been put, both to Home Affairs and to National Healing. So tomorrow morning, because we received this today, tomorrow morning, the three Ministers are meeting, we will also meet with Home Affairs, this is the first concrete thing we have received.

Remember JOMIC is also receiving very concrete issues from the grassroots and they are dealing with those. How are we going to deal with that? Today when the report was given to me in writing, the two chiefs from the area - Makumbe and Gweru - were present and they are also, as traditional leaders, involved in this because what they want to do is to ensure that the traditional manner of resolving conflict does actually start to work now. Because they are saying that it was politicised under Smith, it has been politicised under Mugabe and they would like to really like to understand how traditional chiefs in this new dispensation can ensure that the 12 to 15 people are released and they get their property back. These are the concrete cases that are taking place on the ground.

GONDA: What role briefly are you playing on the issue of the violence on the farms?

HOLLAND: We actually for the first time got the details of that from Minister Chinamasa in Victoria Falls and again tomorrow we are going to see how this can be met by us in the way in which we are organising so that these are also dealt with very, very urgently because at the moment JOMIC is dealing with that. Our role is not to arrest people or to go and talk to them, that’s the work of the Home Affairs. Our work is really to create a set of tools and Zimbabweans have an abundance of cultural assets that they use in conflict resolution which we would like to actually harness and get people to understand that they empower themselves in starting to use these at the family level, at the individual level because they are there.

I think that we are too fixed on looking at how we can resolve situations, you are saying you are looking at the grassroots level but I don’t think people are because, even as we speak there are lots and lots of very positive things that have started happening at the grassroots level because when we say we have cultural assets, I am sure I’m losing a lot of people but I think people should start to understand what was the process that took place kuti vanhu vazo svutisana fodya or ukukhumisa umlotha.

 

There were six stages and if you look at those stages they were justice incorporated. And I think that because we talk about very vague things and very vague ideas, especially when we are outside the country, people are not seeing what is happening on the ground where the whole issue of national healing has to start with our understanding of what it is that we want to heal.

GONDA: Mary, can you comment?

NDLOVU: Yes I’m very happy to hear Amai Holland saying that because some of what she’s been describing is a kind of trouble-shooting of urgent issues that are cropping up but beyond that we will be looking forward to seeing how a national programme can be tied up with a grassroots programme and I agree with her in some places there is positive development in communities where they are starting to look for a way of healing themselves but I think what needs to be done is to link up the whole thing so that the communities can develop their own ideas of what they want. But that can only be plugged into a national programme and we’ll be looking forward very much to see how that can happen, but at the same time, looking for some kind of security sector reform that will go on to make the space open enough to make the people feel free to discuss and move forward.

GONDA: And… (interrupted)

HOLLAND: Violet, MDC has fought to open a democratic space and we have opened it and if people are not willing to actually jump in and also be involved in opening democratic space, this thing will fail! If the grassroots are left to do this fighting on their own in opening democratic space, again it will fail, so I am appealing to the middle class and I am appealing to people in the Diaspora to actually start to talk to the people that they know in Zimbabwe who are affected by this very negative situation that we are coming out of and we are coming out of it.

GONDA: Let me ask Glen Mpani what he thinks about this. Obviously as Amai Holland has told us, the situation has been very difficult and… (interrupted)

HOLLAND : It is very difficult now!

GONDA: So let us just hear from Glen, Amai Holland. Glen, how can the National Healing process be informed by victims and citizens and move away from what many have described as political rhetoric?

MPANI: I think one of the very, very important factors that has been alluded to by Amai Holland about they are envisioning structuring the processes in Zimbabwe is using the grassroots but I think there are a number of issues that I wanted to highlight which should be taken into consideration and I hope that Amai Sekai Holland, through the process that they are going to be going through, they also take cognisance of that.

The first thing is that consulting grassroots, I think there are a number of layers of problems that are likely to take place. One, we should know that there are cases of violence that took place across the political divide so there are victims of violence - of individuals who belong to Zanu-PF, there are victims of violence of individuals who belong to MDC and individuals who don’t even belong to any political structure who were victims of violence from many, many years ago who would want a process of national healing and reconciliation based on their understanding.

The second issue that comes into place is that we cannot have one definition of defining healing and reconciling. People have got different understanding in Zimbabwe of those problems of national healing and reconciliation and Amai Sekai Holland she could even confirm that even among the political parties there are people who view this issue differently.

So you can hold a process of consulting individuals on the ground but through that process you can further divide a nation, so there is need for such a process to be guided by caution to ensure that whatever is going to emerge out of this process is going to achieve the intended benefits. There’s no-one right now, even among ourselves who can tell whether this process is going to get its intended benefits. It’s something that we are going through with commitment that this is going to work.

The other level of problem that I have is that if you look at the debates that are taking place even within the civil society themselves in Zimbabwe - who are some of the major players in issues, there are some who are already proposing that we need a Truth and Reconciliation Commission in Zimbabwe . You ask them to say why do you assume that for Zimbabwe, this is important, they will give you the example of South Africa, they will give you the example of Sierra Leone but looking at those comparative examples of those Truth and Reconciliation Commissions one needs to ask themselves whether they were a success, did they achieve the process of national healing and reconciliation?

So I think what we need to be very careful of is where we do a cut and paste process of borrowing processes and introducing them in Zimbabwe . I was so happy that Amai Holland is talking about the traditional process, it is important but we should be cautious that it has been politicised and we should look at the Rwandan example, where they have used a cultural process, what has been the weakness of that process?

So I think, taking all these issues into consideration, we will be able to allow us to craft a process that is Zimbabwean-oriented and that can allow our people to deal with what happened in the past, but we have to balance the process of getting justice and peace, we can’t forget, forgo either of those processes, we need to balance that and sequence it properly.

GONDA: Now let me go to Mr Bizos. Advocate Bizos, are you still there?

BIZOS: Yes I have been listening to this discussion with interest… (interrupted)

HOLLAND : Excuse me Violet… Violet

GONDA: Amai Holland can you hold on. I want to … (interrupted)

HOLLAND : I think there has been a misunderstanding of what I said because I think that I’m being understood to say we are going to use one method. I said to you we are using an all-inclusive approach and of course the NGOs in Zimbabwe are part of that, the Churches are part, everybody’s a part of that. We are looking at South Africa , we are looking at all of them. I was in Rwanda when Kagame launched Gachacha.We are looking at how we it has developed up totoday. So I am saying to you, we are using an all-inclusive process where everybody will sit as an equal partner to tell us which way to go as Zimbabweans. We are using our cultural assets because we want our own thing but it cannot overlook what has happened in other countries, in Africa , in Asia , in Europe , we are going to be looking at that. We are already looking at that in the internet.

GONDA: Ok so let’s hear from Advocate Bizos to find out the lessons learnt from the South African experience. Now Advocate, on the issue of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, is there merit for that in Zimbabwe in your view?

BIZOS: I think that each country where there has been this trauma over a number of years and where there has been conflict, they are the best people to decide how they want to do it, but what should be taken into consideration is this - that to say let us forgive and forget is easy to say. Yes, it may be easier to forgive but very difficult to forget. One of the results of the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission is that there were denials. The regime said that there were no hit squads. The people said yes there must have been hit squads because the leaders of the liberation movement were killed within the country and in the neighbouring countries and in the rest of Africa where they had taken refuge.

The attitude of the regime was ‘let us start with a clean slate’. The contrary view was well let’s write on the slate what happened and once we have written it then we can try and deal with it but we can’t really reconcile unless there are admissions and an acceptance of the wrongs that have been done. Now I don’t know whether the Zimbabwean people will try and reconcile among themselves without a historical record coming into being as a result of a body appointed by their parliament. And you know the judicial process can’t solve these problems but there is an element which helps reconciliation if the victim and the perpetrator face one another before an amnesty committee where they say what they have done and why they did it. The victims very often find it easier to forgive under those circumstances, particularly if regret is expressed and some sort of restitution extended. This has been our experience.

I hope that the people of Zimbabwe who deserve to become reconciled and united and bring about prosperity in their country will find the best possible way that they can in order to achieve that result. Amnesties differ from countries in the South American states, in the Asian states, in the African states but they do have a common factor and that is that people realise that what wrong has been done to them should not be perpetuated and that civil war or something similar should continue. Having a proper structure and I hear about the historical agreement that has been spoken of and I hope that it works. People have got to work hard at it; they don’t have to necessarily follow the South African example.

GONDA: If I may stay with you Advocate, as we’ve been talking about in this discussion and also many people have been asking the question that we’ve asked earlier on – asking who should drive a process of national healing and reconciliation and should it be the politicians, who are in this case compromised and likely to craft a process that best serves their political ends and pushes for impunity. Now from your…

HOLLAND : (laughing in the background) Violet haaiti…

GONDA: Hello?

BIZOS: Yes I can hear you.

GONDA: Now from your experience with the TRC , what would you do differently if you were given a second chance and perhaps this would also help the people in Zimbabwe ?

BIZOS: A political settlement is absolutely necessary and a settlement in good faith among politicians who as a result of a common patriotism want to get things right in their country. That’s a prerequisite. The structures that we have established in amnesty committees, presided over by judges or people of some legal training, in order to hear the admissions and give an opportunity of the victims to face the perpetrators, we consider to be a necessity.

There are complaints and they are justifiable complaints that it not go far enough. We have examples of a police officer that was responsible for the deaths of about 15 or 16 people in a community - coming in to ask for amnesty and actually going to do work within that community in order to appease them and in order to do justice to them.

It depends on the sort of structure that is established and I think some sort of structure has to be established. I have heard that the communities will start talking to one another. Yes people within a divided community must start talking but they require, I think, some sort of structure in order to control the dialogue between them and offer some sort of apology, some sort of a solution, some sort of compensation for loss in order for the process to work.

GONDA: Right. Let me go to Mary Ndlovu. From your work with victims on the ground, do Zimbabweans feel that the inclusive government is serious in dealing with human rights violations committed in the past?

NDLOVU: Well unfortunately we haven’t seen the inclusive government showing very much unity yet. We hope that might come. Certainly there’s a suggestion on the MDC side that they’re serious about dealing with the violations. It is unfortunate that the GPA only talks about political violence because a lot of the violence against Zimbabwean people has actually been economic violence - causing their poverty, their lives to deteriorate to a level of misery almost. So we’d also like to see that dealt with and we hope that will be able to be dealt with somehow.

But we are prepared to work hard. As WOZA Women we have already started working on discussion and trying to inform ourselves as to what can be done and we’ll be certainly looking forward to a programme coming from government that we can link into and feed our concerns into them and hope that they also provide these structures that Advocate Bizos is talking about. But the structures, I think the important thing is that the structures themselves also be informed by what comes from the ground and that there be a process of dialogue there before anything is actually settled on.

GONDA: Still on you Mary, in the current context in Zimbabwe , do you think it is possible to balance peace and justice?

NDLOVU: Well that’s always a conundrum – which comes first? I think the justice we’ll probably have to wait for quite a while. Probably the peace has to come first and the whole process will be very gradual because in terms of peace, we really have to deal with the security sector somehow so that the abuses stop. How can we really get justice if the abuses are still continuing? It’s going to be very difficult. So it’s not something that’s going to happen tomorrow or next week, it’s something that’s going to happen over a period of months and probably even years. But we’re hopeful that something will come out of it.

GONDA: Glen – there are some who have said that in 1980 Ian Smith and others should have been put on trial to send a message to future leaders that if this happened again, this would not be allowed. What are your thoughts on this?


MPANI: I think there is merit in looking at it from that perspective but if you look at it in the context to say they should have been put on trial, I think that in 1980 there were also political concerns that they were dealing with in relation to the Lancaster House Agreement. And they were forced to take a decision within that context to say; because we want the country to move on we are going to take these hard choices. And I think over and above from that period I think a culture of impunity has been created into the Zimbabwean political space.

And I think what we now need to look at is to say, based on all those developments coming to, to this period that we are in right now, are we going to be taking such a choice to say that in the event that there’s a political crisis - are we going to be taking a choice where we just give amnesty willy-nilly? Or we are going to look at options that Advocate Bizos has been talking about to say there can be conditional amnesty where we need to know what really happened.

Because the real story of what happened since 1960, the Matabeleland massacre, we don’t know some of these issues and I think it is important, not only for the healing process but for posterity so that we understand what went on and what has been happening in the country. And worse enough coming to 2000 to 2008 with the closure of the media, I think we need to know what was happening in the different parts of the country. We’ve got places where things happened that we’ve not been able to know and I think it’s important just to get to know all these issues and put them in the public domain.

GONDA: Mai Holland, at what point in the process does the issue of amnesty come in to play?


HOLLAND: Actually the way the discussion is taking place seems to ignore the fact that most of the MDC leadership has suffered from some of the worst violence, physically, mentally and in every way and it seems that now, when we have got where we think we can all go in and fight to open the democratic space and bring the changes that could get us to where we want, we are now again being seen as having done something wrong.

Nobody at all has discussed amnesty! I have said and I would like to repeat we are going to actually ensure that what Zimbabweans set up and what Zimbabweans get to work on together come up with what we then see as something we agree upon. We can’t, as the three Ministers start off by saying there’s going to be amnesty, there’s not going to be amnesty. I think what I also need to say very quickly which we seem to be misunderstanding is that the Global Political Agreement came about because MDC made a decision that getting inside at this stage was the only non-violent, the only viable, non-violent route that was in our face, that’s why we took that. We would like to really make people understand that for us in MDC , saying that we are not going to use violence means just that and that we are buying peace by demonstrating at every stage that we are going to use peaceful methods to stop violence.

GONDA: I don’t think anyone has said you have done anything wrong as the MDC and correct me if I’m wrong but…

HOLLAND: You are saying we are compromised politicians, all those things which really does not understand that the MDC in going in this Agreement, it was for us a big sacrifice of ourselves because in the situation we were in, everything was as it was and we knew we could be killed the next day - and the fact that each day we go and fight and we get a bit more inch of space, more democratic space, surely is enough to inspire Zimbabweans to understand what it is we are trying to say and get involved because the involvement of everybody is what will give us what we want.

MPANI: Can I just say something Violet? Amai Holland, I get what you are saying, but as you get into a very sensitive matter like this one of national healing and reconciliation which is equally important to even providing food on the table in the Zimbabwean context, there’s going to be both criticism and support in this process. And I think it is important – you have been mentioning in a number of instances to say the Diaspora should support you, it is very commendable what Amai Holland and her colleagues are trying to do in terms of the process of national healing and reconciliation - but I think it’s going to be a highly contentious process, where there is going to be a lot of criticism and that criticism should be taken in the context that each and everyone would want the best process to emerge out of this process.

And I think that some of the things I am getting from Amai Holland are more or less like they have tried so much - we know they have been in the terrain for a long time, they have endured so much from what Zanu-PF has been doing on them. But I think it also important to look at this criticism not necessarily as retrogressive or as criticism that is trying to destroy this process because the moment we do that we are going to shut out a certain level, a certain class of individuals who might want to contribute to the process but simply because they feel that their views are taken to trying to derail the process, this in itself might actually be one of the hindrances of the process.

So this is all I want to say to Amai Holland that it’s important that they take every idea on board - and the people in the Diaspora, in all intents and purposes, they don’t mean badly. I would not want to give myself the responsibility to speak on their behalf but some of the criticism that they give in terms of these processes, is simply because they want to go home, they are not seeing the indications that there is sincerity on the part of the political players in Zimbabwe . So it’s very difficult to convince them from the basis to simply say there is change that is going to be taking place and then in a couple of days hear cases of violence taking place all over the country. It’s very difficult to be talking about national healing and reconciliation in such a context. So their words should match with what is happening on the ground.

GONDA: Mary, do you have anything to add on this issue and on what Amai Holland has said that there’s this unfair criticism on the MDC and that the MDC has really tried very hard to actually change the situation in the country. What can you say about that?

NDLOVU: Well, I think it’s fair enough; a lot of people have been very sceptical and with reason but I think what we feel is that somebody had to try to do something, we couldn’t go on the way we were, and we had to make some kind of effort to solve the problems as Zimbabweans. It’s certainly, as Amai Holland says, it’s not easy and it’s not going to be easy. But when it comes to looking to the future, my only concern, or one of the concerns I find is that people are worried that there might be too much emphasis on reconciliation, this forgive and forget idea and not enough on the fact that we must end this impunity. Crimes have been committed, very serious crimes over a long period of time and somebody must be held to account. Those people who have committed them must face the people, their victims and account to them and in some way somebody has to be punished and the victims have to be compensated so we’d like to see a process where it’s multi-faceted, we don’t just concentrate on getting along with each other but we have to deal with the past in order to go into the future in a positive way.

GONDA: Your final thoughts Advocate Bizos?

BIZOS: We considered, and there were many South Africans who believed the criminal trial was necessary to punish perpetrators. A choice had to be made. If one side insist that members of the other side have to be brought to the criminal court and punished you are not likely to persuade their supporters that, that is a viable solution. Very often the compromise that is necessary in order to create unity is necessary and however strong the calls for justice, punishing the guilty, may be one that we have to understand. In fact the reconciliation route, unsatisfactory as it may be is the better route to follow. I don’t know if they insisted in 1980 that Ian Smith should go on trial whether there would have been a settlement. I don’t know whether there is a possibility of the settlement which has been entered into in Zimbabwe will succeed if one or other side insists that there should be criminal trials and that people should be punished, they should be jailed, they should be directed to pay compensation. It’s going to probably spoil the attempts at reconciliation and peace being brought to the country.

GONDA: And your thoughts, your final words Amai Holland?


HOLLAND : I want to thank the panellists for their suggestions, they are excellent, they will be very helpful and I’m comforted that the criticisms are not ones that are already lumping us as the enemy. That they’re really meant to bring us good ideas but what I’d like to say to the people even that are listening is that we’ve received very few submissions from people. The ones that we have received are excellent, from NGOs, from individuals, at home, in the Diaspora and if we had more, the quality of the work we produce will depend on the quantity and with the participation of Zimbabweans at home, in the Diaspora and from friends of Zimbabwe who have been working in this area for a long time. And I just want to say to everybody listening, if you don’t participate, the quality of the product is not going to be as good as you wish.

GONDA: Can you just help our listeners and readers with the details as to how they can contact you, where they can send their submissions?


HOLLAND : I think that we’ve got offices now. They are on the 9th floor, Clubs Chambers, Nelson Mandela Avenue in Harare .

GONDA: Is there an email?

HOLLAND : email – we don’t have an email yet but everybody knows my email: sekaiholland@gmail.com But we need really for people to write. Unfortunately the criticisms that are made are verbal; we need people to send written submissions because every submission really qualitatively improves our product.

MPANI: Glen, final word?


MPANI: My final word to Amai Holland is that I’m going to take her on her word and will do as much as possible to assist in any way possible and provide them with comparative examples of any processthat Zimbabweans would have opted to craft and I hope that they are going to maintain their stance of listening to the voice of people on the ground and the victims because ultimately that is very, very crucial and important in terms of moving forward.

GONDA: Mary Ndlovu?

NDLOVU: I’d like to assure Amai Holland that WOZA Women will be in the process of discussing and compiling their views and we will make sure that she receives it. We welcome the opportunity to make an input.

GONDA: I’d like to thank distinguished South African human rights advocate George Bizos, Amai Sekai Holland who is Minister of State responsible for National Healing and Reconciliation, Glen Mpani the Regional Co-ordinator for the Centre for the Study of Violence and Reconciliation and Mary Ndlovu a social justice activist. Thank you for participating on the programme Hot Seat.

Holland ,Mpani,Ndlovu: Thank you.

BIZOS: Thank you and I wish the people of Zimbabwe well.

Feedback can be sent to violet@swradioafrica.com


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Botswana pledges credit line as SADC funding deadline expires

http://www.swradioafrica.com

By Alex Bell
16 April 2009

Botswana's government has pledged a US$70 million credit line to Zimbabwe,
days after a deadline set by the Southern African Development Community
(SADC) for members to pledge financial aid to Zimbabwe ran out on Tuesday.

A Botswana delegation, led by the secretary for Economic and Financial
Policy Taufila Nyamadzabo, made the pledge on Thursday during a visit to
Zimbabwe. Nyamadzabo said the global financial crisis, which has seen the
purse strings of most government's tighten, was keeping Botswana from doing
more. The credit line pledge has been welcomed, but it is not the cash boost
Zimbabwe's government has been hoping and working for. SADC leaders have
urged African nations to pledge financial aid to Zimbabwe's government and
two weeks ago set the deadline for the country's to add their pledges to an
economic rescue package.

But that deadline passed on Tuesday night and it is still not clear what
African governments have pledged to the package - if anything. SADC members
have been just as unwilling as international governments to part with their
money to assist Zimbabwe, and have merely committed to Zimbabwe's
fundraising and sanction-lifting cause. At the weekend, South Africa's
Foreign Affairs Minister, Dr Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, said SADC had
dispatched teams of ministers to the United States and European Union to
lobby for the lifting of targeted sanctions in Zimbabwe and to canvas for
economic support for the government. She said, during an election debate
broadcast on the SABC, that SADC governments would not raise all the money
needed in Zimbabwe themselves, but would try to mobilise it from
international donors and international financial institutions.

Last week, a South African Foreign Affairs official reiterated his country's
willingness to assist Zimbabwe's economic revival efforts, but could not
give figures of the economic assistance South Africa was prepared to offer.

Zimbabwe's finance ministry, now under the control of the MDC's Tendai Biti,
has been fighting to secure financial investment in the country, where
critically needed cash boosts have only been in the form of humanitarian
aid. But international donor governments have understandably been reluctant
to invest in the unity government until real visible change is evident in
the country, change that the fledgling government has not been able to
deliver.

The ongoing farm invasions, which have shown a clear fault line between the
government's leaders, are the main reason why direct financial aid is being
held back. But with Robert Mugabe continuing to condone the attacks that
have drawn international condemnation, it is unlikely that the money the
government so desperately needs, will start entering the finance ministry's
currently empty coffers, any time soon.


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Zimbabwe crops to fall despite good season

http://af.reuters.com

Thu Apr 16, 2009 10:09am GMT

* Farm invasions, lack of seed, fertilizer to blame

* Flue-cured tobacco production also expected to fall

* Maize output only 22 percent of national demand

By Muchena Zigomo

DURBAN, April 16 (Reuters) - Zimbabwe's maize output is likely to fall 5
percent in 2008/09 despite a good season, the main farmers union said on
Thursday, due to a new wave of farm invasions and farmers' inability to
afford seed and fertiliser.

Agricultural production in Zimbabwe, once southern Africa's breadbasket, has
fallen dramatically since 2000, when President Robert Mugabe's government
began seizures of white-owned commercial farms to resettle landless blacks.

The Commercial Farmers' Union of Zimbabwe (CFU) said maize output was
expected to fall to 396,250 tonnes during the 2008/09 season from 417,000
tonnes in the 2007/08 season.

"It is mainly because of the problems farmers had with getting inputs, seed
maize and fertiliser in particular, at the start of the growing season and
also the disruptions that we have had on farms," CFU Chief Executive Hendrik
Olivier told Reuters on the sidelines of an agriculture conference.

Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai said last month a new wave of farm
invasions threatened $150 million worth of crops.

"(The invasions) have caused a lot of uncertainty, and even though we've had
a good season, when you look at issues such as rainfall and the development
of crops in the ground, the disruptions on farms have really affected
farmers' confidence to produce," CFU deputy president Deon Theron told
Reuters.

Hyperinflation has also destroyed the value of the Zimbabwe dollar, and
farmers have been unable to afford imported seeds and fertilizers priced in
foreign currencies.

The slump in farm output has caused widespread food shortages across the
country, where the U.N's World Food Programme says about 5.5 million people
have needed food aid since the beginning of this year.

Thousands of white farmers have fled Zimbabwe since the land seizures began
in 2000, and the CFU says the few commercial farmers left cannot produce
enough to feed the country.

Olivier said the union's latest harvest estimates showed wheat output was
likely to drop to 18,050 tonnes in 2009 from 25,550 tonnes in 2008.

He said production of flue-cured tobacco, formerly one of the country's main
agricultural exports, would likely fall to 39,700 tonnes this season from
48,720 tonnes last season.

The CFU said the projected maize output was only 22 percent of the 1.8
million tonnes required to meet national demand for maize. Wheat output is
less than 7 percent of the national annual requirement of 400,000 tonnes.

Critics say Mugabe, who has led Zimbabwe since independence from Britain in
1980, has destroyed one of Africa's most promising economies through
controversial policies.

Mugabe, 85, denies the charge and says the economy has been sabotaged by
enemies opposed to his nationalist policies.

A power-sharing agreement reached in September between Zimbabwe's political
rivals, seen as a chance to save the faltering economy, has yet to be
implemented. (Editing by Sue Thomas)


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MDC confirm participation in Independence Day celebrations

http://www.swradioafrica.com

By Lance Guma
16 April 2009

The MDC will, for the first time, take part in Independence Day celebrations
this weekend with ZANU PF, a party statement has confirmed. Following a
decision to enter the coalition government with ZANU PF two months ago the
party said they now felt they could attend the April 18 celebrations that
mark Zimbabwe's independence from colonial rule. Previously their argument
against participation was that ZANU PF had privatized the occasion every
year, to suit their own political interests.
The MDC has already demanded that the 'programme, the speeches and the
general arrangements of this important day must reflect a diverse people
working together for the betterment of the country of their birth. The day
must reflect the new-found camaraderie among erstwhile political
protagonists.'
There was however no such camaraderie in Masvingo where police are reported
to have banned an MDC independence rally on the grounds that it would be
disorderly and create a clash with the state sponsored festivities there.
MDC provincial spokesperson, Wilstuff Sitemere, confirmed that police had
reversed an earlier decision which had allowed them to stage a rally at
Nemanwa Growth Point South of Masvingo town. The police however are adamant
they did not ban the rally; 'What we just said was that the 18th of April is
a national day, not a party day, hence they have to find another day'.
Meanwhile the MDC has called on the state run Herald newspaper and the
Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation to refrain from using inflammatory
language in their reports. Despite the formation of the coalition government
the two organizations continue to be used for ZANU PF propaganda purposes.
On the celebrations themselves the MDC suggested 'a non-partisan body to
deal with the organization of such national events as well as the selection
of national heroes and heroines so that subjective narrow interests do not
prevail over the national good.'
Whether ZANU PF and MDC supporters can sit peacefully side by side in a
stadium to celebrate a national event remains to be seen, given the state
sponsored violence that claimed the lives of over 200 MDC activists last
year and saw many thousands tortured. An example of the tension was on
display last week when violent clashes broke out between ZANU PF and MDC
supporters at a youth summit, organized by the Ministry of Youth
Development, Indigenization and Empowerment. Scuffles broke out at the
Rainbow Towers hotel during the feedback stage of the conference, over the
sensitive issue of national healing and reconciliation


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29 killed in Zimbabwe road accident


Irish Sun
Thursday 16th April, 2009
(IANS)

Harare, April 16 (Xinhua) Twenty-nine people have been killed and 44 others
injured when the passenger bus in which they were travelling veered off the
road in southern Zimbabwe, a media report said Thursday.

The accident occurred Wednesday night on the Harare-Masvingo highway after
the driver lost control of the vehicle when one of the tyres burst, ZBC News
said.

Three of the injured died at the Chivhu hospital in the southern Masvingo
province, the police said.


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Conservationists fear for Zimbabwe rhino

Associated Press

By ANGUS SHAW - 11 minutes ago

HARARE, Zimbabwe (AP) - Conservationists raised the alarm Thursday for
Zimbabwe's rare rhinos after a sharp increase in poaching because of a
breakdown of law enforcement in this troubled southern African country.

Organized criminal gangs kill rhinos to sell the valuable horn that is used
as a traditional medicine in Asia and carved for ceremonial dagger handles
in the Middle East, Raoul du Toit, head of southern Zimbabwe's Lowveld Rhino
Trust, said in a telephone conference call with reporters.

Zimbabwe's rhino population declined from about 830 in 2007 to 740 at the
end of 2008 despite an excellent birth rate in monitored herds, London-based
Save the Rhino executive director Cathy Dean said during the conference
call.

Save the Rhino said at least 90 rhino were poached in 2008, twice the toll
of the previous year, and conservation groups had counted 18 killed so far
in 2009. It called for concerted action by the Zimbabwean government and
international agencies.

Conservationists also reported a surge in poaching of zebra for their hides.
These, alongside illegal diamonds, gold and other contraband, were smuggled
through Zimbabwe's porous borders.

Some zebra hides ended up as upholstery in Europe and the zebra poachers
were likely to encounter rhino in the same habitat and know their value, du
Toit said.

Du Toit said the rhino poachers were people with "cars, cell phones and
expensive lawyers" and not villagers desperate for food.

Poaching "increased because of our lack of ability to investigate, higher
market prices and the growing Asian footprint in southern Africa," he said.

Du Toit spoke of investigators lacking gasoline to drive suspects to court.
He said authorities were short of money but paid too little attention to the
crimes.

"The repercussions for the country's international image and the economic
implications are a lot more serious than the politicians and the ministers
realize," he said.

He said conservation groups in southern Zimbabwe planned to relocate about
60 rhino from areas vulnerable to poachers.

Tourism and photographic safaris have dropped sharply in several years of
political and economic turmoil since the often violent seizures of thousands
of white-owned farms began in 2000, disrupting the agriculture-based economy
in the former regional breadbasket.

Longtime ruler President Robert Mugabe blames Western sanctions for the
economic crisis that has led to acute shortages of food, gasoline and the
most basic goods.

Poaching of small animals has intensified, with villagers torching the bush
to drive even rodents and rock rabbits into traps for food, conservationists
say.


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Uniformed Forces Get Pay Rise

http://www.radiovop.com

HARARE, April 16 2009 - The government has increased uniformed forces'
allowances from USd 100 to USd 200 starting this month.

 Zimbabwe National Army soldiers started receiving the new allowances on
Wednesday at major banking halls. The Zimbabwe Republic Police are also
expected to receive the new allowances on April 24.

Some officers stationed at Braeside Police Station in the capital, told
RadioVOP that the new allowances had already been deposited into their bank
accounts.

However, the banks have been struggling to pay out the new allowances owing
to a severe shortage of foreign currency in the country.

Soldiers had threatened to revolt if their allowances were not reviewed.

In December last year, disgruntled low ranking soldiers, frustrated by
delays in receiving their meagre salaries because of acute cash shortages,
ran riot in the streets of Harare, looting shops and attacking illegal
foreign currency dealers.

In addition to the allowances, the uniformed forces also receive salaries in
local currency, which was however last week suspended until next year.

The civil servants started receiving allowances in hard currency in February
following the formation of an inclusive government. The government is
currently spending USd 23 million a month on salaries for ministers and
allowances for civil servants.

Welshman Ncube, the Minister of Industry and Commerce, told a meeting in
Bulawayo recently that government was only raising USd 30 million through
taxes and other sources.

A remainder of only USd 7 million was being used for national programmes.

The more than 70 ministers along with the civil servants are reportedly
chewing up USd 23 million, he said.


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700 cheat death as Zimbabwe train kills 3 jumbos

http://www.zimdiaspora.com/

Thursday, 16 April 2009 15:49

MORE than 700 passengers miraculously escaped unhurt when a Bulawayo-bound
train from Victoria Falls knocked down and killed three elephants on Sunday
morning.

Grateful passengers hailed the train driver as a hero after he calmly
steered the locomotive, averting disaster during the long Easter holiday
that was characterised by a high death toll on the country's roads.
The accident happened in the Bongoro area between Dete and Hwange's Thompson
Junction.
National Railways of Zimbabwe Public Relations Manager Mr Fanuel Masikati
said no one aboard the train was hurt.
Witnesses, narrating the dramatic sequence of events, said a herd of about
nine elephants was crossing the railway line when the train struck three of
the jumbos.
"There were about nine elephants and the train struck two adult elephants
and the third was a young one," said a passenger.
The train did not derail but the locomotive was damaged and another had to
be sent from Dete to continue with the journey.
"I would like to commend the train driver for remaining calm and managing to
steady the train before it struck the animals as that avoided a catastrophic
incident that would have claimed human lives," said Mr Masikati.
Passengers, who should have arrived in Bulawayo at about 8am on Sunday, only
reached the city around 7pm on Monday owing to the delay.
"The travellers were delayed because there was a need to bring another
locomotive from Dete but I am happy to say that all the travellers arrived
safely," said Mr Masikati.
He said the accident did not affect operations as the Victoria Falls train
has resumed business.
"The train has resumed its normal route and as I speak it is about to reach
Victoria Falls," said Mr Masikati yesterday morning.
Meanwhile, villagers in the western parts of Tsholotsho district are
spending sleepless nights in their fields in a bid to scare away marauding
elephants that are destroying crops.
At a meeting to discuss the operations of the Communal Areas Management
Programme for Indigenous Resources (CAMPFIRE) in Ward 3 on Sunday,
traditional leaders said elephants were wreaking havoc.
They said villagers were now being forced to spend nights in the fields and
that they were getting no joy from the Tsholotsho Rural District Council,
which was giving excuses when asked to assist.
The council authorities say they have a shortage of bullets to use and at
the same time claim that they have limitations on the killing of the animals
since they are covered under the Convention for International Trade in
Endangered Species (CITES).
Mr Jericho Moyo, the CAMPFIRE manager, explained that CITES only allows for
the killing of extremely troublesome animals and the villagers felt that
authorities should have mercy on them given that their crops were being
destroyed on a large scale by elephants wandering from the Hwange National
Park.
"People who came up with the laws are based overseas where there are no
problem animals like what we are experiencing on the African continent.
Surely they are being oppressive to us because we are losing so much to
these animals," said a villager.
The acting Chief Mathuphula, Headman Mlevu, appealed to the powers-that-be
to relax the laws regarding problem animals and appealed to the media to
take the issue seriously because the jumbos were also a threat to human
life.
He noted that recently, a villager, Mr Raphael Ndlovu of Mantshelengwa area,
was attacked and injured by a lion that had troubled villagers and killed
more than 10 cattle in the Mlevu area.
The lion attacked Mr Ndlovu as he was accompanying a hunter who had been
engaged to track it down and shoot it.
Mr Moyo reminded the villagers that at one time, some villagers trapped and
killed seven lions and that the Parks and Wildlife Management Authority
investigators took him to task after some villagers had told the Parks
Authority that he had given them permission to kill the lions. Chronicles


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MDC: MPs to get vehicles from government not RBZ


16 April 2009

MPs to get vehicles from government not RBZ

The MDC acknowledges the important role played by legislators in both the
upper and lower houses on issues of community development, feedback forums
in their constituencies and the frequent consultative processes that are
required to keep their constituents informed about what their
representatives are doing in Parliament.

As a party, we are aware of the need for MPs to have instruments of delivery
such as offices, computers and vehicles. The issue of their vehicles should
be handled by through the Vehicle Loan Scheme put in place by Parliament and
the government of Zimbabwe. We have not heard that Parliament is no longer
handling this scheme to the extent that the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe could
once again become a central player in dishing out and distributing largesse
when the government is now agreed that the Central Bank should not engage in
quasi-fiscal activities.

It is disturbing to note that the RBZ continues to be abused and to abuse
itself by continuing to engage itself in quasi-fiscal operations when such
operations should migrate to the government through the Ministry of Finance.
Engaging in distribution of capital products is in itself a quasi-fiscal
activity.

The MDC has a strong position against quasi-fiscal operations which have
ground our once vibrant economy to a virtual standstill. We do not have any
report as a party that any of our MPs has collected a vehicle from the RBZ
but if there is any that have done, then they have acted against the party
position. Their case will be brought before the National Executive and the
National Council and these party organs will take a final decision on the
matter.

The MDC believes that national institutions must refrain from those
activities that have run aground our economy. The RBZ cannot continue to
dabble in nefarious activities that have since been condemned by the
inclusive government.

The nation wants to start afresh. The MDC is a party of excellence.

We believe the inclusive government must open a new chapter of prudence,
accountability and honesty. We cannot at this juncture begin to puncture the
people's hopes and aspirations by scoring cheap popularity points on serious
national matters. The Central Bank cannot be allowed to corrupt and poison
the legislature.

Zimbabwe deserves its place among the family of nations. But we can only do
so when we begin to respect values such as honesty, accountability and
fiscal prudence.

MDC Information and Publicity Department


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Daily cholera update and alerts, 14 Apr 2009


 Full_Report (pdf* format - 205.8 Kbytes)


* Please note that daily information collection is a challenge due to communication and staff constraints. On-going data cleaning may result in an increase or decrease in the numbers. Any change will then be explained.

** Daily information on new deaths should not imply that these deaths occurred in cases reported that day. Therefore daily CFRs >100% may occasionally result

A. Highlights of the day:

- 363 Cases and 30 deaths added today (in comparison with 73 cases and 1 deaths yesterday)

- Cumulative cases 96 358

- Cumulative deaths 4 195 of which 2 565 are community deaths

- 71.7 % of the districts affected have reported today 43 out of 60 affected districts)

- 91.7 % of districts reported to be affected (60 districts out of 62)

- Cumulative Institutional Case Fatality Rate = 1.7%

- Daily Institutional CFR = 1.3 %.

- Kadoma flagged twice for reporting 191 cases and Case Fatality Rate of 12.6

- C4 to assess Cholera epidemic preparedness and response in Mashonaland West ( 16-17 April 2009)

- No report received from Bulawayo, Mashonaland East, Manicaland, Matebeleland North and Masvingo provinces.


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Daily cholera update and alerts, 15 Apr 2009


 Full_Report (pdf* format - 169.5 Kbytes)


* Please note that daily information collection is a challenge due to communication and staff constraints. On-going data cleaning may result in an increase or decrease in the numbers. Any change will then be explained.

** Daily information on new deaths should not imply that these deaths occurred in cases reported that day. Therefore daily CFRs >100% may occasionally result

A. Highlights of the day:

- 115 Cases and 9 deaths added today (in comparison with 363 cases and 30 deaths yesterday)

- Cumulative cases 96 473

- Cumulative deaths 4 204 of which 2 574 are community deaths

- 85.0 % of the districts affected have reported today 51 out of 60 affected districts)

- 91.7 % of districts reported to be affected (60 districts out of 62)

- Cumulative Institutional Case Fatality Rate = 1.7%

- Daily Institutional CFR = 6.2 %.

- Most of the Kadoma cases reported yesterday were reported retrospectively. Kadoma Cholera Situation stable

- C4 to assess Cholera epidemic preparedness and response in Mashonaland West ( 16-17 April 2009)

- No report received from Chitungwiza, Chikomba, Marondera, Mudzi, Ruwa, Masvingo City and Gweru.


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Lance Guma speaks to Minister of State Gorden Moyo

Minister of State Gorden Moyo on BTH

I
nterview broadcast 09 April 2009

Lance Guma: Hello Zimbabwe, welcome to another edition of Behind the Headlines. My guest this week is Gorden Moyo the Minister of State in the Prime Minister’s office. He essentially is Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai’s right hand man in the new coalition government and joins us on the programme to talk about progress so far. Minister Moyo thank you for joining us.

Gorden Moyo: Thank you

Lance: Now the new coalition government has created hope in some quarters but equally has generated criticism in others. Let me start with the workability of the new arrangement. Would you say you are working well with Zanu PF so far?

Moyo: No this is a transitional arrangement. It is a government by compromise. A lot of things have been compromised, therefore we wouldn’t expect a smooth flow but in general I would say we are working well. We are trying our best from all quarters, all parties involved to make this arrangement work. It is the intention of everybody and it is the hope of everybody that the norms and values enshrined in the GPA (Global Political Agreement) are achieved through this inclusive government.

Lance: Several issues from the Global Political Agreement remain outstanding. Can you give us an update on some of these issues particularly I’m talking here the political prisoners Gandhi Mudzingwa, Chris Dhlamini and the journalist Shadreck Manyere. Is there any movement there?

Moyo: A lot of work is being done but as you would agree with me there are obstacles, there are hurdles, there are challenges in any transitional process. So we have not achieved everything we would have wanted to achieve within the given time frame. Therefore we still have some outstanding issues. For example the issues of the governors, the issues of the permanent secretaries and ambassadors. These are issues that are on the table and are to be discussed by the principals and you would recall that one of the principals has had tragedy after tragedy as a result the pace was sort of stopped or impeded. But we are hoping that within the next couple of weeks most of those issues will be dealt with at political level. Those that need political dialogue or political dialogue as part of the realization or full implementation of the GPA. As regards the arrests we are expecting that everybody should be released but I’m fully briefed that a lot of work is being done and the courts are also doing their work and we are hoping that everything will be done in due course.

Lance: Well I suppose Minister Moyo what is frustrating a lot of people is that most of this is contained in an agreement so really there should be no hurdles in implementing what has already been agreed. For example we understand a formula had already been agreed for appointing Provincial Governors. So what would be there to discuss?

Moyo: We are all disappointed that this has not been done but there are some circumstances. Circumstances that have prevailed against the full realization of the implementation of the GPA. Like I said we have had one of the principals having to go through emotional trauma, you know his emotional bank account being over-drawn by circumstances beyond his control. So he couldn’t have been there and issues of governors, issues of permanent secretaries and ambassadors are issues of the principals, that is President Robert Mugabe, the Prime Minister Mr. Morgan Tsvangirai and Professor Arthur Mutambara. There are the ones in that trinity who should ….(inaudible)…then the issues cannot be addressed. This is not a way of saying ..eh…eh a way of trying to explain ourselves, this is the truth and we are hoping that he is now back and he is back and he is ready to ensure the issues are tabled and they are resolved. If they are other circumstances, those circumstances should be dealt with. But I don’t think there is a reversal to the issues of the governors. There is no amount of delay, no amount of dialogue can change that because it is already agreed that the issues of governors, the permanent secretaries and ambassadors are issues that should be resolved.

Lance: And we have the other weird scenario were despite you (MDC) designating Roy Bennett Deputy Agriculture Minister, he still hasn’t been sworn in. How big a problem is this?

Moyo: This is a big problem because the Minister is supposed to be at work. The Minister is supposed to be helping in the recovery of the Agricultural sector. Right now we have the winter wheat cropping which is supposed to be in full swing and we needed those two hands, the Minister and his deputy and we are not happy at all. We are hoping that again as the principals meet this issue will be dealt with.

Lance: Do you have a time frame for this meeting of principals, is it next week, the other week, any dates?

Moyo: Had it not been for the Easter Holiday and had it not been for the retreat this week the principals were supposed to meet to deal with those issues. And I guess that next week or the week after they shall be that meeting.

Lance: The ongoing farm invasions have attracted a lot of negative publicity and obviously harmed the country’s ability to get international aid. In terms of real practical action what is being done to stop the disturbances?

Moyo: The JOMIC (Joint Monitoring and Implementation Committee) has been tasked by the cabinet to look into the issues, to verify all the cases, to come up with the information, so that these issues are dealt with. It is not in the inclusive government’s interest to have the disruptions in the farms. We are all against the disruptions in the farms and we believe these have to be stopped and stopped immediately. But as a government we have tasked the JOMIC to do its work because you would recall that in the GPA it was resolved that there shall be a land audit and it was resolved that land distribution has to be stopped until that land audit is done. So for only those people who have been legally given the offer letters to go into the farms, those are the only people who could be resettled now. All new, fresh farm invasions are illegal and they are not in the interest of this government. Therefore JOMIC has been tasked to deal with those issues and again the Minister of Lands and Resettlement was tasked to immediately come up with a framework for the land audit so that we deal with these issues of land distribution once and for all. We need to bring this thing to a closure. But we are all saddened by the complaints and the concerns that we are receiving right across the country because we are receiving information and we are receiving these complaints right across the provinces of the country and people are being disrupted from doing their daily work in the farms. So it’s something that is disturbing and we are hoping that once we get the information from JOMIC, once we get the information from the Land and Resettlement Minister, we will then move forward and find a solution that will be amicable and bring closure to this issue.

Lance: But why was the issue taken to JOMIC. I mean why did we not have a situation were the police are just told to do their job and arrest anyone breaking the law?

Moyo: The police are supposed to arrest and I’m sure they are arresting those criminal elements. But at the moment we have got a problem because most of the people going to the farms are holding some offer letters and we need to verify whether those offer letters are legitimate, whether those offer letters are up to the standard, are those letters part of a government programme? We need to verify that and it is very difficult for the police to arrest people with offer letters. But those elements that go into the farms, disrupt and force people out, they are supposed to be arrested, if they are not arrested then the police are not doing their work.

Lance: Isn’t the other problem then that we have the 78 farmers who took their case to the SADC tribunal and won and got SADC protection from the tribunal. A lot of those offer letters involve those farms also, is that not a legally complicated scenario?

Moyo: It is complicated. You would recall that we are only 7 weeks or so in government. We are still trying to understand what was going on before the formation of the government. We want to understand why the farmers who got a ruling in their favour are also suffering. We need to understand all these issues. These are not issues we can resolve overnight. So as a new government, as an inclusive government, we are doing everything within our means and within our purview with these issues. Understand when we act, we act with information. When we act we will be decisive. We do not want to act out of emotion and out of expediency or out of adhoc or adhocracy. That will be detrimental to the image, the credibility of the inclusive government. We are gathering facts. We are having meetings with the Commercial Farmers Union. We are having meetings with Ministers of Home Affairs. We are having meetings with the Minister of Lands and Agriculture, Minister of Agriculture…rather Lands and Resettlement and Minister of Agriculture. We are trying to gather information, bit by bit so we could come up with solutions before we come up with options. But at the moment we have an institution in the name of JOMIC which is part of the agreement between the political parties in government. That institution of JOMIC has to do its work and we are expecting them to do their work and we are yet to be briefed after the cabinet meeting that we had some other time which actually commits them to do a review of what is happening on the farms.

Lance: Moving on to another topic Minister Moyo, the Ministerial retreat in Victoria Falls, it has attracted some criticism with people like Tsholotsho Member of Parliament Professor Jonathan Moyo calling it a retreat into sleaze. Some say it cost over US$300 000 and that the money should have been used for other priority areas. Do you feel the criticism is justified?

Moyo: No people are free to criticize and you cannot blame people for criticizing you. Governments are there to be criticized. Governments are there to be analyzed. So we appreciate any criticism and as a democratic government we are not immune to criticism, so we accept criticism. But on this particular matter, we believe and we believe with conviction that we needed to come together as government from cabinet ministers to deputy ministers, to permanent secretaries and to directors of ministries and together with the leadership, Prime Minister, Deputy Prime Minster, Vice President and the President because we are coming from various political ideologies, we have been fighting. We needed to come up with a team, with a solid team that will tackle the challenges that this country is facing. Therefore in our view it was important and it was our objective to meet so that we look at those issues. Those teething problems that we are facing, the history and the baggage that we have, we needed to deal with those issues so that we could look forward together. We could enforce the challenges together. I know that we shall continue to have the differences but now we shall have the differences understanding each other’s perspective, each others views and that was important to us. And it is helping us from now onwards because we now understand each others point of view and when we are making decisions and when we are having meetings and we are making policies, we understand each other’s views. We have been fighting and the retreat was there for us to start a new chapter. To…..(inaudible)….of conflict culture and we needed to move forward and the retreat in our view was that event. That process which is helping us to move forward. So we appreciate the comments and criticism, it’s alright, we learn from that, but democracy is expensive. Now those that are saying we used a lot of resources, fine, but democracy is expensive everywhere. In other countries you have, people die, a lot of people die. We needed to come together to avoid such things in future.

Lance: And on another side issue the allocation of Mercedes Benz vehicles to some of the ministers has also generated negative headlines. Do you think Mugabe is deliberately trying to tarnish the MDC and make them out to be similar in terms of extravagance with what we have always associated with Zanu PF?

Moyo: I don’t believe so. My humble view is that ministers need to have transport. Ministers need to be able to travel from one point to another. You can’t have ministers disabled by way of motion, they cannot travel. That to me is not acceptable. And it is a world standard, all countries across the world have ministers given a decent kind of treatment in terms of their mobility. So I don’t see any problem. What would be a problem is the accumulation of those vehicles, to have a number of vehicles, vehicles that are just parked. That to me is not acceptable.

Lance: Maybe they were not attacking just simply giving them cars but the type of car is considered rather expensive.

Moyo: But I know that there are other vehicles which are not Mercedes Benz which are more expensive than Mercedes Benz. So that does not necessarily mean that if you have a Mercedes Benz it is more expensive than other vehicles, that’s not true, that’s a mere perception. For example the vehicles that ministers are driving, most of them are driving E280 which is a very decent and humble Mercedes Benz. That’s what I have seen myself and I don’t think it s problem for ministers to be able to travel from one point to another.

Lance: Okay we are running out of time Minister Moyo, but we will just squeeze in one more question. What areas so far do you think the new government has been successful in?

Moyo: You know success is not what you get but what you continue to do with what you get. It is not a destination it is a way of traveling. The successes that we have scored are in my view... are simply humble. We do not go out and shout on top of the mountains and say we are making big progress we are making successes, that’s not important for us. What is important for us is to see the life of the people of Zimbabwe changing and we can see that. You can see some people are able to go to the shops, find goods in shops, find goods in shops, find basic commodities in the shops. They are able to buy them and go home and have some meals with their families. That is important for a start. This country for 29 years has been going through serious problems and we have been there for 6-7 weeks and we have had these changes. And to us that is humble and we feel good about it. But it is not a basis for us to go out and shout on top of mountains and on top of roofs, no we are not doing that. But you can see indeed inflation coming down, you can see the hope amongst our people, you can see some industries begin to function. You can see a lot of people around the world who would not come to Zimbabwe beginning to come to Zimbabwe and these are incremental gains and we believe that a country like Zimbabwe and the problems in a country like Zimbabwe cannot be solved over a month, over a year or over two years. It will take time and we are working towards that and after 100 days we will be able to say we set ourselves these goals and this is what we have achieved. So now we are only seeing signs and symptoms of change but we are not yet satisfied at all.

Lance: That was Gorden Moyo the Minister of State in the Prime Minister’s office. Mr. Moyo thank you for joining us Behind the Headlines.

Moyo: Thank you.

To listen to the programme: Click Here

For comments and feedback please e-mail lance@swradioafrica.com

Lance Guma
Producer/Presenter
SW Radio
Africa
www.swradioafrica.com
Mobile: +44-777-855-7615
Tel: +44-208-387-1415
http://twitter.com/lanceguma


Full broadcast on Shortwave: 4880 kHz and 12035
KHz. Also available 24 hours on the internet.

You can also access archives at http://www.swradioafrica.com/pages/archives.php


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Mugabe grabs an MDC ministry


Photo: South African DFA
President Robert Mugabe
HARARE, 16 April 2009 (IRIN) - Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe's seizure of a ministry controlled by Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai's Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) is casting more doubt on his commitment to the fledgling power-sharing deal.

The birth of the unity government on 11 February 2009 was designed to dilute the powers accumulated during Mugabe's nearly 29-year rule, which has reduced the once prosperous nation to penury.

The first few months of the unity government have been characterized by Mugabe's intransigence and flouting of the Global Political Agreement (GPA), brokered between Mugabe's ZANU-PF and the MDC by former South African president Thabo Mbeki, under the auspices of the Southern African Development Community.

''What is clear, following the outcry as a result of Mugabe's actions, is that the decision to change the ministries was not arrived at as a result of consultation and consent''
Mugabe has unilaterally announced that the transport ministry, controlled by ZANU-PF stalwart Nicholas Goche, would be expanded to absorb the functions of the ministry of information, communication and technology, headed by Nelson Chamisa, who is also the MDC's spokesperson.

Among the responsibilities taken from the MDC was control of Net One, a mobile phone network and services provider, postal services, and the fixed-line phone network provider, Tel One.

Tsvangirai declared the grab "null and void", saying, "This [appointment) does not only fly in the face of the letter and spirit of the Global Political Agreement, but is also an illegality, as the GPA has legal effect."

ZANU-PF's absorption of the communications ministry allows it to avoid obtaining authorization from the MDC to spy on its citizens.

Spying on its citizens

The Interception of Communications Act permits Zimbabwe's security agencies, controlled by ZANU-PF under the GPA, to monitor telephone conversations and e-mails, and intercept letters, but had required the consent of the communications minister.

Mugabe's realignment of ministries was "in total violation of the GPA, which is very clear that all major decisions made by the [unity] government would be as a result of consultation and consent," political commentator Chris Mhike told IRIN.

"What is clear, following the outcry as a result of Mugabe's actions, is that the decision to change the ministries was not arrived at as a result of consultation and consent."

Since its inception the unity government has suffered numerous body blows, in which Mugabe has contravened both the spirit and letter of the GPA, and the violations have been met with a standard response by Tsvangirai that Mugabe's actions were "null and void".

Mugabe unilaterally reappointed permanent secretaries in government ministries without consultation; opposition and civil society activists, and a journalist, remain jailed on charges of "recruiting bandits" to topple Mugabe; Reserve Bank governor Gideon Gono, who presided over the collapse of the economy, was reappointed - without consultation - for another five-year term.

Provincial governors have still not been appointed. In line with the March 2008 election results, in which ZANU-PF lost control of parliament for the first time since independence from Britain in 1980, most governors have to be chosen from the MDC.

Mugabe has also refused to swear in the deputy agriculture minister designate, Roy Bennett, a white former commercial farmer whose land was taken as part of the fast-track land reform programme that began in 2000 and triggered the eventual collapse of Zimbabwe's economy.

''If the country is unable to secure the requested funding, we are more likely to see discontent and social unrest that will challenge the strength of the unity government''
Since the unity government came into office, the material conditions of Zimbabweans have changed little. More than half the country relies on emergency food assistance, unemployment is estimated at 94 percent and pleas for a multibillion-dollar assistance package have so far gone unanswered.

"If the country is unable to secure the requested funding, we are more likely to see discontent and social unrest that will challenge the strength of the unity government," warned a recent report by the Standard Bank, one of South Africa's largest.

"The humanitarian crisis might also worsen. The recovery process might be longer and more difficult, with the high probability of divergence among major political parties in the unity government," the report commented.

Finance minister Tendai Biti told IRIN that the unity government was only receiving US$20 million a month, one-fifth of its minimum monthly requirement.


[ENDS]

[This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]


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Tales of a nation in darkness

http://www.metro.co.uk/

Author Interview: Petina Gappah
By TINA JACKSON - Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Petina Gappah laughs heartily at the idea of being an over-achiever. 'I have
a very stern father,' giggles the Swiss-based Zimbabwean lawyer, whose debut
short story collection, An Elegy For Easterly, has already prompted praise
from South African literary luminary JM Coetzee.
Behind the warmth of her conversation, though, Gappah has a strong sense of
anger and that's where these stories came from, in reaction to the terrible
events taking place in Zimbabwe.

She is very specific about when she started writing: May 2006. 'It was like
a stream, all these stories coming,' she says. 'There was so much going on
in Zimbabwe and I channelled all my anger and frustration into these
stories. I wrote 22 stories in a year.'

An Elegy For Easterly is a quiet storm of a collection, conjuring up the
lives of ordinary Zimbabweans struggling to live under the horror of Robert
Mugabe's regime. In January this year, Physicians For Human Rights published
a report that argued the basic provision of clean water and healthcare in
Zimbabwe had collapsed as a result of government policies.

'This is why we had the cholera epidemic last year,' agrees Gappah,
vehemently. 'If you have a total breakdown of your sanitation system, that's
how it spreads.' In one month alone, Médecins Sans Frontières treated 4,000
cholera cases in Zimbabwe.

I wanted to show that Zimbabwe wasn't always this collapsed economy: we had
a dream of a nation we wanted to be and we could have been anything

When Gappah took her five- year-old son with her to Zimbabwe over Christmas,
friends were horrified. 'But like anywhere else, even Somalia, you can have
a perfectly good life if you have money,' she says. 'If you have dollars,
rands - anything apart from Zimbabwean dollars - you can have security.'

Yet Gappah, who was born in 1971, recalls a very different Zimbabwe: when
the newly independent former Rhodesia was a symbol of hope and liberation.

Her stories evoke the time in 1980 when Bob Marley's song Zimbabwe
celebrated African self-determination after Ian Smith's white minority rule
and the reggae superstar performed it in front of 100,000 in Harare's Rufaro
Stadium.

'I wanted to show that Zimbabwe wasn't always this collapsed economy: we had
a dream of a nation we wanted to be and we could have been anything,' she
says.

Gappah's life was shaped by independence. 'We lived in the township and
after independence we moved to a nice house in the suburbs.'

Her father was determined his children would have the university education
he hadn't had: Gappah got her first law degree from the University of
Zimbabwe, where she was a radical Marxist notorious for organising a
miniskirt protest after male students ripped off the short skirt of a
visiting German student.

She moved to study postgraduate law in Austria in 1995 (during which time
she also took a further law degree at Cambridge) but her decision to leave
Zimbabwe wasn't about escape. 'At that time, Zimbabwe was a great country
and life was really easy. Then things flipped around.'

Gappah is matter-of-fact about the financial support her salary provides to
family members still in Harare; after all, she notes, she's not the only
one. 'At least one person from each family in my old street is living
outside the country. It's an astonishing brain drain.'

Gappah's day job providing legal aid on international trade law to
developing countries, though, was not her first choice of career. She wanted
to be a writer from the age of ten. In 2006, she had 'a mini life crisis
where I woke up and thought I might die as this lawyer who always wanted to
write and never did anything.' The stories in An Elegy convey horror with a
feather-light touch. 'It's essential if you're dealing with a heavy
subject,' she insists.

'I'm writing about ordinary people living in a situation rendered
extraordinary because of politics. I hope the stories tell you something
about the Zimbabwean character: the resilience, the tenacity, the humour.
The desire to survive.'

An Elegy For Easterly is published today by Faber, £12.99


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Government of national what?

http://www.swradioafrica.com

Tanonoka Joseph Whande

I am very concerned with the way both the Movement for Democratic Change and
ZANU-PF are behaving.
They are a 'unity' government at least that is what they told us and the
world they had agreed to be.
We knew; they knew; SADC knew, the United Nations knew, the African Union
knew and so did everybody else that they had totally different agendas and,
more importantly, we knew that they did not get along at all.
We have corpses littering our countryside as evidence of their not getting
along.

But they agreed to come together, supposedly to save our nation from the
disaster that had been caused by one of them, ZANU-PF.

Today, they are our representatives in our march towards normalcy.
They stand as beacons of hope in a ravaged nation, a collapsed economy, a
decimated people, a ruined and demoralised populace.

Because they agreed, we agreed.

They are the supposed engineers of peace, forgiveness, reconciliation and
unity.
But they are not showing us any of these.
Violence on the farms continues.
Innocent people remain in jails.
And Mugabe has started 'firing' and trimming 'opposition' cabinet ministers'
portfolios. Bad faith indeed!

They continue to display the same discord and acrimony that caused so many
of us to die and that sent millions of our brethren into foreign lands where
they continue to be treated with disdain, with no protection from their
government, their own government of national unity.

Today, we waste time debating and scolding each other over their
differences, differences we have always known existed.
And instead of bandaging each other's wounds, we try to search who amongst
us is a moron for supporting that side or the other.
We scold each other in their name as if they listen or care.

What should we make of this chaos that was born from an effort to bring
order?

It does not seem to me that these two groups care about the issues and
people at all but are more concerned with their own survival at the expense
of the majority.
They are spending all their time getting into each other's way and
discrediting each other, not to mention ambushing national policies in an
effort to derail the other's intentions.

We, the people, now come second to their desires and wishes because our
concerns and hopes are only addressed after they have fought their own
battles of supremacy over each other.

The people have suffered for too long and can no longer be expected to
continue being cheerleaders to this suspicious so-called Government of
National Unity (GNU).

Disappearances and arrests have not stopped. Has the rule of law been
restored?

The words "civil society" used to be the MDC's anthem. They wanted the
people to be involved in everything they did. Whenever Robert Mugabe and his
army and police were abusing the people and the workers, the MDC always
called upon the people to resist, to demonstrate and, in effect, to show
Mugabe that he no longer enjoyed the support of the majority.
And the people always obliged, but the responses to the MDC's calls were
always peppered with deaths and injuries. But the people soldiered on.

The people gave the MDC all the support it needed.
But for some time now, I have watched as the MDC slowly sidelined the people
and "civil society".
Even during the fateful talks that brought about this government, civil
society was sidelined.
People were consulted less and less and today, people cannot honestly
believe that this is what they wanted. They have a problem believing this is
the solution.

Today, the MDC appears happy with both its own and ZANU-PF parliamentarians
that they do not want to involve civil society in the researching and the
drafting of a new constitution. They feel they and ZANU-PF can do it by
themselves.
Oh, no! Power does not corrupt; corruption empowers people to corrupt
governments and society.

Granted, the shelves reportedly have food and there are US dollars, Rands
and Pulas available to some people.
Even inflation is reported to be going down. How can it not be down; we are
using other people's money.
Worse still, we are not producing anything to offset what we are reportedly
importing.
We are not using our own money to buy what we sell in foreign currencies.
Zimbabwe is one huge flea market. We sell what we do not produce.

At this point, the so-called revival that is filling up the shelves in
ZANU-PF owned supermarkets is artificial and has nothing to do with us and
production but has everything to do with charity.
It will end dismally unless we start producing and we won't do that soon
since there are no property rights in our country.

And now the very same people who messed up the country, and literally
presided over the deaths of so many of our compatriots, are venomously
sitting on our backs demanding more from a nation they destroyed.

General Constantine Chiwenga, Air Marshall Perence Shiri, Police
Commissioner General Augustine Chihuri and Paradzai Zimondi, are poking
around and trying to force the MDC to grant them amnesty.
The MDC has no authority to do that. Let them try it.
Besides, to my knowledge, none of them has admitted or confessed to any
wrongdoing so how can any amnesty be granted?
Worse still, before amnesty can be granted, we need to talk; they need to
talk.

And then there are those outdated war veterans who soiled their own stature
and importance with greed.
These people are asking for more and more money for the work they did for
Mugabe in destroying the nation.
Mugabe has referred these shameless blood-suckers to Prime Minister Morgan
Tsvangirai, first, because Mugabe has no money and, second, to tarnish
Tsvangirai as much as Mugabe tarnished himself.
My advice to the prime minister is that war veterans must just stay on the
farms they seized and make a living selling what they produce to local and
international markets. They must form their cooperatives and work for once.
They should not be given a penny more.

After independence, the war veterans were given demobilisation money.
Some years later, they demanded lump cash payments and Mugabe ignorantly
acquiesced. That extravagant payout signalled the beginning of the decline
of the Zimbabwean dollar, which today sits suspended because nobody, not
even the war veterans themselves, want to touch it.

The war veterans further demanded pensions and received them.
They were still not satisfied so they went on and invaded farms which they
shared amongst themselves and their ZANU-PF bosses, resulting in severe
shortages of food, starvation, malnutrition and hunger across the country.
Thousands lost their jobs because of this.
When the international community intervened to feed the starving
Zimbabweans, the war veterans were in the forefront again to either receive
food aid or channel it to their own families and political allies.

Just a few weeks ago, Mugabe came out in support of new farm invasions that
caused so much violence on the farms during this Easter Holiday.
Mugabe accepted SADC's support that resulted in this pathetic government of
national unity but Mugabe will not accept SADC's Tribunal that judged that
the farm invasions were illegal.

If the prime minister's mission is to appease Mugabe and his destructive war
veterans he can go ahead and placate them. These are the very same people
who once tried to throw him out of his 10th floor office window.

No this government of national unity is not working. Even Mugabe's lawless
war veterans want him to pull out of it.
This government of national unity does not seem to have any direction other
than to please Mugabe and his goons.
The little money that has trickled in is going to betray us and make us
believe there is an economic revolution going on.
The MDC must stop being a supporting act to ZANU-PF's continuing destruction
of the country.
This is the time the MDC should take its lawmakers to the Victoria Falls for
a retreat. They must go there and talk about how they are NOT betraying the
people. How they should quit this charade.
What is the way forward?

Send me your comments on tano@swradioafrica.com

I am Tanonoka Joseph Whande and that, my fellow Zimbabweans, is the way it
is today, Thursday April 16, 2009.

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