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Mugabe rewards merchants of death

http://www.thezimbabwean.co.uk

The purveyors of the horrific political violence that engulfed Zimbabwe
prior to the June 2000 elections have all been promoted by President Robert
Mugabe, The Zimbabwean has established.
09.07.1101:39pm
John Chimunhu

A list of the high-profile perpetrators, published by the Human Rights NGO
Forum in July 2001, could be confused for a who's who of the high and mighty
in government and Zanu (PF) business today, after Mugabe blocked trials and
issued controversial amnesties to free those implicated.

The most senior perpetrator now sitting in government with the leader of the
victims, Morgan Tsvangirai of MDC-T is Joice Mujuru, who was made
vice-president after conducting a nationwide reign of terror.

Mujuru was the acting minister of defence in the run-up to the 2000 polls
and authorized the supply of weapons and logistics to war veterans and Zanu
(PF) militias rampaging through the farms, towns and villages attacking MDC
supporters.

At least 35 MDC supporters and five commercial farmers were killed during
that period but not a single conviction has been made for the murders,
including that of David Stevens, who was dragged from a police station and
shot by war veterans.

Most of the trial documents and physical evidence such as bullets have
disappeared while material witnesses have vanished after being displaced or
threatened.

Mujuru was seriously exposed after she wrote a letter to the Mozambican
police putting a $25 000 bounty on the head of Sarodzi Chavakanaka, alias
Zulu, a war veteran who had defected to the MDC and was campaigning in her
Mt Darwin constituency. Zulu lived four kilometres from the border and was
known to flee to Mozambique when Mujuru supporters came looking for him.

Another perpetrator is Saviour Kasukuwere, who was named in the death of a
petrol attendant in Mt Darwin and numerous cases of violence.

Other violators now in senior posts are Herbert Murerwa, now minister of
lands, Nicholas Goche, now minister of transport and communications, former
deputy ministers Joel Biggie Matiza and David Chapfika, governor Ray
Kaukonde and MP Shadreck Chipanga.

Border Gezi and Chenjerai Hunzvi escaped justice through death while others
like Gladys Hokoyo, Sabina Thembani, Joseph Mwale, Wilson Biggie Chitoro,
Kainos 'Kitsiyatota' Zimunya, Artwell Chiwara and Nobbie Dzinzi have
actively been ptotected for a series of horrific murders, torture and other
assaults on Mugabe's opposition.

A parliamentary investigation into the violence stalled in 2000 after Zanu
(PF)'s Eddison Zvobgo claimed the matters were with the police and in the
courts and were, therefore sub judice.


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ZNA colonel gives MDC supporters ultimatum

http://www.thezimbabwean.co.uk/
 

A Zimbabwe National Army Colonel, Charles Muresherwa, has given MDC supporters in Mhakwe and Chikwakwa wards in Chimanimani an ultimatum to renounce their MDC membership and join Zanu (PF) before July 15.


The homesteads of MDC supporters torched two months ago by Zanu (PF) youths, allegedly on instructions from ZNA Colonel Muresherwa. 
The homesteads of MDC supporters torched two months ago by Zanu (PF) youths, allegedly on instructions from ZNA Colonel Muresherwa.

Muresherwa, who is a serving member in the army and also aspiring Member of Parliament for Chimanimani East, has been moving door-to-door in the area with soldiers in army uniforms asking the villager’s political allegiance.

“If you say you support MDC, they write your name down and promise to get rid of all MDC supporters in the area after 15 July. All the lists of MDC’s supporters have been handed over to local headmen and chiefs by Muresherwa,” said Stephen Mhlanga, the MDC councillor for ward 19.

Mhlanga said some MDC supporters have already “defected” to Zanu (PF) and are expected to be paraded at a meeting called by Muresherwa on July 15 at Ndangana business centre in Chikwakwa.

“He has organised political rallies where he says soldiers will address the villagers.All the local headmen and chiefs have been instructed to mobilise their subjects to attend,” said Mhlanga. The MDC coordinator for Chimanimani, Pardon Maguta, confirmed the latest development in this MDC dominated area.

“We are taking Muresherwa’s threats seriously,” he said.

Muresherwa has also been accused of setting up torturing bases at Nyambeya primary school, Wengezi township and Nhedziwa growth point in Mutambara where Zanu (PF) youths under his command terrorise opposition supporters.

Two months ago Zanu (PF) youths, allegedly under the colonel’s instructions, torched several huts of MDC supporters in Cashel Valley while two beasts belonging to the local MDC district chairperson were axed by the youths after the chairperson refused to sign the so called anti-sanctions petition.

Muresherwa has also been moving around in the constituency with Zanu (PF) youths dolling out cabbages and small pockets of salt as part of his campaign gimmick.

During the run up to the discredited March 2008 elections Muresherwa moved around the constituency brandishing an AK 47 and intimidating MDC supporters.

 
 


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Mugabe’s generals lay out their plans for next year’s election

http://www.southernafricareport.com

07-Jul-2011

As Zimbabwe awaits the arrival of SADC’s tri-national support-team to assist
with the process towards internationally accepted elections, the country’s
generals are finalising their own plans to ensure a victory for President
Robert Mugabe’s Zanu PF.

The generals, most of them veterans of the guerrilla war that ended white
rule in 1980, have been an integral part of the Zanu PF administration since
it won power in the first democratic elections. But when Morgan Tsvangirai’s
Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) emerged as a serious electoral threat
after 2002, they moved directly into all areas of government, creating a
formal parallel administration in 2006, accountable through the National
Security Council (NSC) directly to Mugabe. They have also moved, with Mugabe’s
encouragement, directly into the administration and operation of Zanu PF,
holding the line against possible compromise by the parliamentary party.

Since their 2008 failure, despite widespread violence and disruption, to
prevent an MDC electoral victory they have operated as an informal
opposition to the multiparty “inclusive government” forced on Zimbabwe by
SADC. With Mugabe they have also marginalised the NSC – in which Tsvangirai
serves – establishing in its place the non-statutory Joint Operations
Command (JOC) as a shadow administration, competing for influence with the
formal authorities in the multiparty “inclusive government”.

The JOC’s place in security force and civil government command and control
is outlined in detail in the Profile: Zimbabwe security forces supplement
published this week.

The generals remain openly antagonistic to Tsvangirai, refusing to
acknowledge his legitimacy as prime minister and committed to preventing him
winning presidential elections – he won the first round comfortably in 2008,
but withdrew from the run-off poll after a security force-Zanu PF campaign
of violence left nearly 300 dead and thousands displaced or forced into
exile.

The violence came too late to prevent MDC securing a parliamentary
majority - but rescued Mugabe’s candidacy only at the last minute.

This time, the generals are preparing well in advance to avoid a repeat of
2008. And although security force officers have played a direct role in
election administration and campaigning for Zanu PF since 2002, at the next
elections they intend to entirely replace Zanu PF officials and
office-bearers, particularly in the highly contested provinces of Masvingo
(lost to Tsvangirai in 2008) and Manicaland.

At the centre of the military web is former Air Force of Zimbabwe head, Air
Vice-Marshall Henry Muchena, who retired in December to take up the
innocuous-sounding position of director of the Commissariat in Zanu PF. He
is coordinating the generals’ strategy to manage the election (the generals
continue to insist elections will take place this year, in line with a Zanu
PF resolution, although both Mugabe and Zanu PF have privately acknowledged
that presidential, parliamentary and provincial polling will only be
possible in 2012 at the earliest).

The strategy involves an integrated, pre-emptive campaign of military
intimidation and mobilisation of paramilitary youth formations (notionally
through the Zanu PF Youth wing) for deployment against MDC centres of
electoral strength. The objective is to disrupt MDC electoral mobilisation
and to intimidate its supporters either into staying away or, preferably,
into voting Zanu PF. With MDC support running nationally at nearly three
times that of Zanu PF this is a tall ask, particularly with control of the
Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC) now contested through the appointment
earlier this year of several independent or MDC-aligned commissioners (see
SAR Vol 29 No 18).

The months before the elections will be difficult for rural Zimbabweans,
particularly in Masvingo and Manicaland provinces – designated “battleground
provinces” in the situational analysis on which the strategy is based. The
generals believe pre-emptive action can regain Masvingo and consolidate in
Manicaland, giving Mugabe a fighting chance to retain the presidency.

Muchena’s deputy in the Zanu PF Commissariat,  Kizito Kuchekwa – a Zanu PF
representative on the multiparty Joint Monitoring and Implementation
Commission (Jomic) on which SADC is placing substantial reliance – privately
acknowledges the need to “throw it all” at the two contested provinces,
while working actively to discourage support for MDC elsewhere.

The generals are in the process of deploying two senior officers in each
administrative district in command of several non-commissioned and
rank-and-file soldiers – given leave from the military on a semi-permanent
basis – to coordinate non-military activity with that of the formal security
force activity.

The military has also taken direct control of Zanu PF campaigning in
Manicaland: Brigadier-General Douglas Nyikayaramba, commander of the army’s
Mutare-based 3 Brigade last month blandly informed Zanu PF politburo member
Didymus Mutasa that the army was taking over Zanu PF’s electoral campaign.
With the future of Zimbabwe at stake, he told Mutasa, the army “cannot
afford to leave the campaign exclusively to politicians who are weak and
divided”.

Mutasa’s sidelining is an indication of the extent of military control in
Zanu PF: Mutasa is a Zanu PF heavy-weight. A former a liberation war
commander, post-independence chair of Zanu PF, and one-time Minister of
State Security, he is still a Cabinet Minister (Minister of State in the
office of the President).

Nyikayaramba himself is no political lightweight: while purportedly on
retirement he served as Chief Electoral Officer for the ZEC in 2002
elections (the first MDC contested), when there was evidence of
vote-rigging. His range of responsibilities is the definitive example of the
breadth of the security forces’ reach: he chairs the board of the National
Railways of Zimbabwe, and is the chief advisor to Zanu PF in the
Parliamentary Constitutional Select Committee.

He first caught the public eye shortly after independence when Lieutenant
Shepherd Nleya, an officer under his command in 1:2 Infantry Battalion in
Hwange, was murdered after threatening to expose the involvement of
Nyikayaramba and other senior commanders in contraband and illegal rhino
horn smuggling on operations in Mozambique. The killing was a defining
moment for the military, from which it arguably never recovered.
Nyikayaramba and Brigadier Constantine Chiwenga were widely believed to have
ordered the murder. The incident did not inhibit the career of either man:
Chiwenga is currently head of the Zimbabwe Defence Forces (the army and air
force).

Nyikayaramba is particularly blatant in his dislike for electoral democracy,
telling journalists recently that he and others in the security services
would do anything in their power to keep Mugabe in office.
By late last month, Brigadier-General David Manyika’s 4 Brigade began a
series of marches and parades throughout central Masvingo, advertising their
armed presence as an explicitly partisan force – MDC officials have
complained that the troops have been singing pro-Zanu PF and pro-Mugabe
songs.

A new element of Zanu PF’s electoral strategy is to incentivise youth
support for the party by fast-tracking youth representation in the party’s
leadership structures.

In the past liberation war veterans who dominate party structures have
treated Zanu PF Youth and veterans of the National Youth Service as
functionaries.

Retired Air Vice-Marshall Henry Muchena, who now heads the Zanu PF
Commissariat and is coordinating the party’s military-created elections
strategy, is driving a programme to revitalise the party by attracting young
blood. He has already met youth representatives and has undertaken to
promote the nomination of candidates under 30 in three Harare
constituencies.

He is also campaigning for an enforced generational mix in the Zanu PF
politburo – arguing for a quota of 40% of politburo members under the age of
40.


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Mugabe Critics Targeted In Zimbabwe

http://www.voanews.com/

Editorial

07-09-2011

Officials of Mugabe's ZANU-PF party are using the police against their
perceived political opponents in Zimbabwe to pursue political goals.

As long as politicized arrests and harassment like this continue, there will
not be a political environment that will permit free and fair elections.

Officials of Robert Mugabe's ZANU-PF party are turning up the heat on their
perceived political opponents in Zimbabwe by using the police to pursue
partisan political goals.

Members of Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai’s MDC party have been arrested
on trumped-up charges frequently in recent months, only to be released when
the courts found no grounds for their arrests.  Unfortunately, such
harassment has become the norm in Zimbabwean politics, but these arrests
further undermine the rule of law in the troubled Southern African nation
and add to the partisan wrangling that is destroying it.

The latest arrest came June 24 when Jameson Timba, a minister of State in
Tsvangirai's office, was detained for allegedly undermining the authority of
the president. Specifically, Timba was said to have called Mugabe a liar for
mischaracterizing the outcome of the recent Southern African Development
Community summit on conditions in his country.  The nation's High Court
ordered Timba's release, but he was briefly detained and issued a warning.
That means the police could pursue the case at a later date.

The case mirrors that of Elton Mangoma, the energy and power development
minister in Mr. Tsvangirai's cabinet. He was arrested on graft charges
connected to the importing of fuel to Zimbabwe. Here too, the High Court
dismissed the charges saying state prosecutors failed to present a case, but
not before Mangoma was arrested and incarcerated.

As long as politicized arrests and harassment like this continue, there will
not be a political environment that will permit free and fair elections.
This is unfortunate, because the people of Zimbabwe deserve to have a
government that will respect their will and protect their rights.

The United States again calls on all parties to work together to fulfill the
promises they made in signing the 2008 Global Political Agreement and work
to depoliticize the operations of the police and other state institutions.


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Zanu (PF) hires ‘prophets’ to cow MDC

http://www.thezimbabwean.co.uk

Zanu (PF) leaders here have hired an apostolic prophet in a bid to boost
party membership.
08.07.1104:46pm
Jane Makoni

Led by Sheppard Kaserere and Marondera East Party chairperson Sheppard
Zenda, the party last Friday hired a preacher to persuade suspected MDC
supporters to swap allegiances at Nhowe Shopping Centre.

Villagers were threatened and made to believe the prophet had divine powers
to flush out MDC supporters among the crowd.

“It would be in the best interest of your personal security to voluntarily
repent and join Zanu (PF) before the prophet here present fishes you out,”
Kaserere warned shoppers.

“All MDC supporters come forward and confess your political ‘sins’ and swear
loyalty to President Robert Mugabe and Zanu (PF).

“Failure to do so now would attract regrettable consequences.”

Party officials told The Zimbabweanthey had to regain as many supporters as
possible before MDC invades the area ahead of the next general elections.

“The moment Iain Kay visits the area for political campaigns, everyone would
listen to him and follow his advice,” a village 14 Zanu (PF) youth
organising secretary said.

“This time around we devised a counter strategy and before Kay lands here
everyone would be Zanu (PF) and barred from attending MDC rallies.”

He said MDC officials were also being forced to join Zanu (PF) structures.


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Truth a casualty: MDC battles Zanu (PF) misinformation

http://www.thezimbabwean.co.uk

Sharp political differences, suspicion, grandstanding and vested interests
have resulted in complete communications chaos in Zimbabwe's troubled
coalition government.
08.07.1104:25pm
Staff Reporter

The coalition of President Robert Mugabe and Prime Minister Morgan
Tsvangirai has been issuing conflicting statements on a myriad of issues.

The deliberate misinformation has been costly to the MDC, which saw Jameson
Timba, the minister of State in the Prime Minister's office, arrested and
jailed briefly for calling Mugabe a liar over the outcome of a regional
summit.

The conflicting statements have become even more confused as the GNU hurtles
towards another election.

The latest has been on the agenda of a meeting whose purpose was to agree on
a timeline for reforms to be carried out in the homestretch of the political
marriage.

The President and the Prime Minister last week issued separate and divergent
news statements at the end of what was supposed to have been a principals’
briefing.

The GNU has tried bonding retreats to promote cohesion in government but
that has apparently been unhelpful. The fissures are widening.

One senior government spokesman is saying one thing, while another says the
contrary. The comical drama has played out in the coalition government since
its formation in 2009 but has got worse over the past six months. Mugabe's
spokesman George Charamba is at the centre.

Misleading reports

The PM's spokesman, Luke Tamborinyoka, a trained journalist, moved quickly
to correct misconceptions created by Mugabe's spokesmen about the outcome of
the briefing on the election roadmap and media reforms.

"There have been misleading reports in the press about what transpired at
the meeting of the principals held at Zimbabwe House on July 6,"
Tamborinyoka said.

"The Minister of Media, Information and Publicity and the Permanent
Secretary are not spokespersons of the principals and cannot claim to speak
on behalf of all the principals of the inclusive government.


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'Disband Zesa'

http://www.dailynews.co.zw/

By Chengetai Zvauya and Helen Kadirire
Saturday, 09 July 2011 13:48

HARARE - Zimbabweans from all walks of life have demanded the immediate
dismissal of power utility firm Zesa Holdings management and the disbandment
of underperforming parastatals following paralysing power cuts throughout
the country.

Ordinary people, human rights organisations, farmers, traders and the
general populace has called on President Robert Mugabe and Prime Minister
Morgan Tsvangirai to immediately take action against Zesa board and
management as power shortages persist in the country.

The people are demanding that new heads should take over at the power
utility whose erratic supply of electricity has caused untold suffering to
farmers, patients at hospitals and industry while the darkness that befalls
every suburb in Harare has seen residents being terrorised by thugs.

Most homesteads and industries now rely on generators which are expensive to
run because of the high costs of fuel and maintenance. While management at
Zesa is busy harassing Minister of Energy Elton Mangoma, they are failing to
deliver power to the country.

The blackout is heavily felt this winter with power outages affecting
industries and residential areas.

Even the city centre this week experienced serious blackouts which severely
affected business.

Farmers are also feeling the pinch of blackouts as the power shortages are
affecting their winter cropping which needs electricity to drive the water
irrigation pumps while poultry, piggery and ‘Disband Zesa’ beef projects
need electricity to be fully operational.

Farmers who spoke the Daily News said that they no longer had confidence in
the power utility and wanted it to be disbanded and be replaced by more
serious private players.

A newly-resettled farmer in the Mazowe area, Ben Chakanetsa who grows wheat,
potatoes and maize and is also into poultry and cattle breeding, said Zesa
was letting down farmers.

“We are not getting any electricity that we desperately need this winter for
our cropping and breeding programmes. For our farming season to prosper, we
need adequate supply of electricity which is not available. We hope that
Zesa is going to help us. We feel that Zesa needs to be disbanded and allow
another player to come into the industry so that we can have other options,’’
said Chakanetsa.

However, Zesa spokesperson Fullard Gwasira said Zesa was trying their best
to service its customers.

“It is not secret that we have been experiencing power problems since 2000,
but we are trying to do our best. I don’t know that there was power problems
in the city yesterday. I shall find out from our maintenance department what
problem affected the city and I will inform you,’’ said Gwasira, clearly
displaying the arrogance that has crept in at the struggling power utility
firm. Zesa has for many years been one of the best examples of how to
mismanage businesses and also a good example of a firm which has dismally
failed to deliver service to the people.

The country produces 1400 Megawatts a day from the power stations at Hwange,
Munyati, Kariba and Harare. Zimbabwe needs 2200 megawatts a day.

Zesa is importing 300 megawatts from Mozambique and Namibia.

Load-shedding has increased this winter season as the residential areas and
industries are spending many hours in without electricity.

Combined Harare Residents Association (CHRA) coordinator Simbarashe Moyo
said on several occasions the organisation has condemned the poor service
delivery by Zesa.

Moyo said they have been receiving many reports from their structures
complaining about load-shedding.

“The residents say that what was now happening is no longer load-shedding
but complete blackouts as some sections can be without electricity for days.
Residents are now wondering whether they should be paying their bills
considering that they hardly have power,” Moyo said.

He said there have also been reports of household electrical appliances
being damaged due to unannounced power cuts.

Moyo also said residents have now resorted to paying fixed amounts because
they do not get their statements and when they do, it is not a true
reflection of what they would have consumed.

“Residents should not be made to suffer because Zesa has debts that it is
failing to settle. They should first clear then a way forward can be forged
from there,” he said.

Glen View resident, Timothy Magede said there is no reason for Zesa
management to be still occupying their positions and taking home huge perks
while making the people suffer.

Prominent Harare resident and businessman Paddington Japajapa said it was
criminal for Zesa management to remain in office while blackouts persist.

“It’s a scandal that we still have people claiming to be bosses at Zesa
while denying people electricity. It’s like we are in a war situation. In
other countries, the board and management should have been arrested,” said
the fiery Japajapa.

Last month Bulawayo residents, mainly women organised by Women of Zimbabwe
Arise (Woza) a non-governmental organisation that advocates for women’s
rights in the country, marched in Harare and Bulawayo demanding the power
utility firm provide quality service to its customers.

They said Zesa is charging high tariffs which do not justify the shoddy
service they are providing to customers.
They gathered to sign the “anti-abuse of power petition” to express their
frustration at the persistent 18-hour power cuts which occur on a daily
basis.

Woza said Zesa was engaging in daylight robbery through the unending power
cuts but charging large amounts of money.

Woza requested Zesa to stop using fixed meters and to ensure they provided
proper timetables of load-shedding and urgently put in place a proper and
transparent billing system.

They chanted slogans, calling for justice, freedom and urgent social
reforms.

Zesa owes regional suppliers more than US$100 million in accumulated debt.

Despite facing electricity supply problems, Zimbabwe is exporting power to
Namibia at a low cost. Zesa officials have in the past, defended this saying
they are paying back what they owe the Namibians.

Mangoma was not available for comment yesterday.


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Rolling blackouts warning

http://www.thezimbabwean.co.uk

The Zimbabwe Power Company (ZPC), a subsidiary of the Zimbabwe Electricity
Supply Authority (ZESA), has warned of more rolling blackouts as the utility
struggles to meet demand on the back of collapsing infrastructure and
sub-economic tariffs.
08.07.1104:19pm
Vusimusi Bhebhe

ZPC chairman Richard Maasdorp said load shedding would “remain a way of life
until we expand generation at Hwange and Kariba”.

Current total generation capacity at the two stations and smaller thermal
plants in Harare, Munyati and Bulawayo is around 1 400 megawatts against
national demand of 2 200MW.

Maasdorp however said new investment and private sector funding into
generation capacity would not be forthcoming while our tariff remains
sub-economic and in the absence of a long-term tariff formula.

The current tariff of 7.53 USc per kilowatt, was set in February 2009 and 28
months later the utility was still awaiting approval of a “cost-reflective
tariff”.

“In the absence of an increase to the tariff, ZPC has now had to slow down
its efforts to stabilise and optimise power from its existing power
stations. In addition efforts to raise capital for adding generation
capacity (a four-to-five-year process from when funding is secured) will be
thwarted,” the ZPC chairman warned.

He revealed that the utility has in the meantime been forced to cut back on
maintenance and ongoing refurbishment in order to compensate for the
sub-economic tariff.

“This is clearly not sustainable and if the situation is not addressed
urgently, the lights you have from time to time today will go out tomorrow,”
he said.

Zimbabwe has experienced rolling power cuts during the past decade due to
inadequate generation capacity by ZESA.

This has seen ZESA implementing a load management programme under which the
utility regularly switches off some customers during the day in order to
stretch the available supplies.

The daily power cuts have affected domestic consumers as well as the
business community, with some factories forced to retrench workers due to
low production.

ZESA said it was making alternative arrangements with other southern African
utilities to augment supplies during the shortages necessitated by the
ongoing maintenance work on the Kariba plant.

Zimbabwe imports about 35 percent of its power needs from the national
utilities of Mozambique, Democratic Republic of Congo, South Africa and
Zambia.


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Byo residents up in arms about water, ZESA, ZBC

http://www.thezimbabwean.co.uk

Residents here are up in arms about the disconnection of water and
electricity by the Bulawayo City Council and the Zimbabwe Electricity Supply
Authority for those who have not paid their bills.
09.07.1101:29pm
Staff Reporter

They feel that the service providers are being insensitive as it is common
knowledge that most Zimbabweans are either unemployed or earning salaries
below the poverty datum line. The Progressive Resident’s Association has
recommended that the two service providers meet with residents so that
payment plans can be made and disconnections avoided.

Residents have also castigated the Zimbabwe National Road Authority for its
failure to maintain roads in the city, despite getting funds from tollgates.
ZINARA has also been accused of skewed allocation of funds for road
maintenance. Nothing much has been done to fix potholes this year, and
residents fear the situation could spiral out of control if the next rainy
season begins and nothing has been done to deal with potholes.

The BPRA has held two public meetings to discuss ZBC television licences, as
inspectors have been demanding payment of $50 for the license plus $20 fine
for late payment. Residents say this is daylight robbery because BC
programming is of very poor quality, characterised by repetition of
programmes and political propaganda.

Most residents have resorted to satellite television as a result and refuse
to pay for a service they are not accessing. They vowed to continue
resisting payment until there was an improvement by ZBC.


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Electoral amendments don’t go far enough: ERC

http://www.thezimbabwean.co.uk

The proposed amendments to the Electoral Amendment Bill, to be put before
parliament soon as part of the roadmap to elections, leave Registrar General
Tobaiwa Mudede firmly in control of the controversial voter’s roll.
08.07.1104:24pm
Staff Reporter

In its recent analysis of the amendments, the Election Resource Centre
explains that the existing electoral act is not explicit around the issues
of the voters' roll. It assigns responsibility for the custody of the roll
to the Zimbabwe Election Commission, but the maintenance of the roll remains
firmly in the hands of the Registrar of Voters.

The Registrar falls under the Ministry of Home Affairs and is not
accountable to the Commission, which falls under the Ministry of Justice.
Such a situation makes it difficult to secure accountability around the
roll, hence the controversy on the issue. The proposed amendment is still
silent on the issue, meaning that even after it passes, Mudede will still be
in charge of the roll.

Despite considerable evidence to the contrary that has been fully reported
in this newspaper, Mudede continues to claim that the document is perfect.

The ERC has highlighted a number of problems with the current act and the
proposed amendments. One chief concern is that the Chief Election Officer is
the Returning Officer in the Presidential Election.

“Such a provision means that a formal decision on the election will be made
by an individual and the commission has limited, if any, say in it. In
international practise, the Returning Officer in the Presidential election
is the Chairperson of the Election Commission and decisions are made by a
quorum of Commissioners. Considering the controversy around the secretariat
at ZEC and the failure to come up with a solution on the matter in the
roadmap to elections, this is crucial,” says the ERC.

The adaptation of a polling station based voters’ roll can only serve to
accommodate further disenfranchisement of voters through displacements,
especially in the absence of security guarantees for the voter. The ERC
believes a broader approach to the roll such as the one prevailing now would
allow insecure voters to travel to safer polling stations to cast their
ballots within the same ward.

The ERC has urged Parliament to tighten all the obscure clauses that could
potentially undermine future elections and reject inhibiting sections in the
gazetted bill.

Problem issues in current Act

Silent on announcement of results.

No long-term observation

Early deployment of domestic and international observers not possible.

Silent on access of election agents and observers to national, provincial,
constituency and ward election centres where tallying of votes is conducted.

Promotes opportunities for electoral manipulation.

Makes the Chief Election Officer the Returning Officer in the presidential
election.

Formal decision on election will be made by an individual - commission has
limited, if any, say.

Polling station voters’ rolls – will further disenfranchise voters through
displacement, especially in the absence of security guarantees.

New registration of voters – The amendment needs to explicitly state that
new voters should submit themselves in person. This would assist in curbing
the current scenario where one political party is reportedly simply
submitting lists of new voters for registration.

Removal from the roll – if person absent from constituency for12 months -
disenfranchises a significant proportion of voters.

ERC Proposals

Ensure access of the registration process to potential voters and allow
voters to decide where they would like to register - as long as they can
provide proof of residence.

Relax proof of residence which is too stringent and has disenfranchised
thousands of potential voters owing to its stringent nature.

Allow lodgers and rural people ostracised for their political beliefs and
unable to court the favour of traditional leaders to exercise their
constitutional right.

Recognise the need to monitor all election processes by international
observers.

Do not limit the scrutiny of future election processes - open them up
through allowing early invitation of domestic and international observers,

Facilitate smooth accreditation of observers and protect them from
obstructions and hindrances in the execution of their duties.

Protect secrecy of postal ballot through explicitly protecting successful
applicants.

Introduce an inner envelop with the name of voter and an outer one which
will be shown to election agents and observers.

Tighten process of opening postal ballots to further protect secrecy.

Decentralise observer accreditation to provinces.


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MDC To Submit Draft CIO Bill To Parly

http://www.radiovop.com

Harare, July 09, 2011 - Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai’s MDC party has
completed drafting a bill to regulate the operations of the Central
Intelligence Organisation (CIO).

The bill was drafted within the framework of the party’s growing demands for
security sector reform The party tabled its demands for security sector
reform during the ongoing talks for an electoral roadmap for the country
demanding among other things the regulation of the operations of the talks.

During the talks, Zanu PF threw the ball in its court saying it did not know
how to regulate the CIO and therefore the party has to come up with a draft
bill to guide the discussion on CIO operations.

“We have got a draft bill already which in our own opinion should regulate
the operations of the intelligence,” said Tendai Biti, mainstream MDC
Secretary General.

“There is nothing new about what we are doing; we have used precedence from
South Africa and other countries with a regulatory framework. The issue is
not about regulating their operations and say, you should follow this one
and tap this phone that’s not the issue. The issue is that the institution
definitely must be accountable to parliament that’s all we are saying.”

Depending on how it will be received by the Global Political Agreement (GPA)
parties, the bill should be presented before parliament and enacted into law
if all goes well.

The party has in the past accused the CIO, police and army for deliberately
targeting its members to break their political spirit. The party in a
document sent to the Joint Implementation Committee (JOMIC) last month
chronicles how its members were abducted and murdered in political raids in
2008.

The party blames the attacks on the security arms of the state. It also
believes that the continuing violence in the country is being sponsored by
the state and executed by security apparatus.

The State Security Minister, Sydney Sekeramayi, is in charge of the CIO.


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Governing Parties Lock Horns Over Public Pay and 'Ghost Workers'

http://www.voanews.com

08 July 2011

Estimates of the number of ghost workers range from 13,000 according to the
MDC formation of Industry Minister Welshman Ncube to 75,000 by the count of
the MDC wing led by Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai

Blessing Zulu, Gibbs Dube & Tatenda Gumbo | Washington

Zimbabwe's national unity government is again in gridlock, this time over
so-called ghost workers who have moved to center stage as the government
looks for the means to increase civil service salaries without driving the
national budget into deficit.

The Movement for Democratic Change formation led by Prime Minister Morgan
Tsvangirai said the alleged ghost workers include many youth militia members
who were improperly put on the national payroll by the former ZANU-PF
government, and that many millions can be saved if they are dismissed from
ward-level positions.

The Cabinet is sharply divided on the issue while the unity government
principals were unable to reach a consensus on the fiscal and political
muddle.

The government was put in an awkward position last week when negotiators for
public workers announced they had hammered out a deal with government
negotiators under which the lowest-paid state employees would be paid US$253
a month. Civil servants were jubilant until it became clear that the deal
had not received Cabinet approval.

Since then, ZANU-PF has pushed for the government to ratify the pay increase
which President Robert Mugabe promised state workers months ago, while Mr.
Tsvangirai and Finance Minister Tendai Biti, secretary general of his party,
have dug in against the increases saying the government is too financially
strapped to afford them.

The Tsvangirai MDC formation has made the case that a pay increase for civil
servants would be more affordable if public payrolls could be purged of
"ghost workers," a term covering not only no-show or deceased state workers,
but also the youth militia said to have been hired by the thousands by
ZANU-PF as rural political enforcers.

ZANU-PF ministers refused to adopt a report prepared by consultants Ernst &
Young on ghost workers. It was the second report the party has dismissed. It
previously rejected a 2009 report by Auditor and Comptroller General Mildred
Chiri which said the youth ministry illegally employed more than 10,000
youths during the 2008 elections.

Estimates of the number of ghost workers range from 13,000 according to the
MDC formation of Industry Minister Welshman Ncube to 75,000 according to the
MDC wing led by Prime Minister Tsvangirai. The International Monetary Fund
reckons there are 14,000 ghost workers on state pay lists and another 38,000
irregularly hired workers.

Public Service Minister Eliphas Mukonoweshuro said the cabinet has formed an
inter-ministerial task force of experts to review the consultancy report on
ghost workers.

ZANU-PF Youth Minister Saviour Kasukuwere accused the MDC of politicking.
“There are no ghost workers in the public service and I think the MDC is
making unnecessary noise about this issue,” said Kasukuwere, whose portfolio
includes indigenization.

Finance Minister Biti has warned that increased civil servant salaries would
force the government to cut funding for health, education and other critical
social programs.

In a document reviewing aspects of public service pay submitted to the
president, prime minister and Deputy Prime Minister Arthur Mutambara, Biti
argued that an increase to the proposed US$253 a month will result in a
US$400 million deficit for this year.

Estimated employment costs including medical insurance and pensions will hit
US$1.8 billion against a budgeted US$1.4 billion, Biti said.

Economist John Robertson said the finance minister is correct in saying tax
collections cannot support a wage increase. Commentator Bekithemba Mhlanga
said ZANU-PF should not be twisting Biti’s arm to push an unworkable
populist agenda.

Students, meanwhile, said the stalemate over state sector pay is affecting
education at all levels and if continued could roll back the progress made
since the unity government was launched in early 2009. Students Solidarity
Trust Program Coordinator Masimba Nyamanhindi said students want to see a
workable solution as soon as possible.


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Prosecutors under fire

http://www.dailynews.co.zw/

By Bridget Mananavire, Staff Writer
Saturday, 09 July 2011 13:55

HARARE - An MDC official accused of undermining the authority of the police
is being kept in remand prison out of spite by prosecutors, the Zimbabwe
Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR) has said.

The state invoked Section 121 of the Criminal Procedure and Evidence Act
(CPEA) to revoke bail granted to Oliver Mukombwe, the MDC treasurer for
Bindura district.

Section 121 of CPEA has the effect of suspending bail for seven days pending
the filing of an appeal by the State in the High Court.

Mukombwe is alleged to have provoked police constable Nemiah Muzinda over
the weekend in a public place in Bindura.
Mukombwe is alleged to have said: “Makajaidzwa naMugabe. Munofunga kuti
chipurisa chinoshamisa here? Zvenyu zvokupinda nechiZanu PF hazvina basa
saka ini ndinoda kukuuraya (You have been spoiled by Mugabe. You think the
police work is special? Your joining of the force through Zanu PF
partisanship is useless, so I want to kill you).”

He was arrested and subsequently granted bail before the state invoked the
harsh law.

ZLHR said it was perturbed by the state’s “malicious and obdurate” action,
which showed that prosecutors were “bent on continuing to unnecessarily
infringe upon the fundamental right to liberty of accused persons by
bringing up Section 121 of the CPEA”.

Prosecutors and law officers from the Attorney General’s Office have on
numerous occasions abused the controversial provision to keep accused
persons in custody despite them being granted bail by the courts.

Attorney General Johannes Tomana last year acknowledged that his law
officers and prosecutors had at times misjudged when they unnecessarily
invoked section 121 of the CPEA to effectively reverse the granting of bail
to accused persons.

“ZLHR is concerned at the frequent abuse of this draconian piece of
legislation, which is used to the prejudice of suspects as prosecutors are
clearly usurping the powers of the judiciary who in this case had
safeguarded the fundamental right to liberty of Mukombwe,” said ZLHR.

The human rights organisation said it remained concerned about the increased
number of cases in which Section 121 of the CPEA had been “arbitrarily and
unjustifiably” invoked, particularly against members of the MDC and other
genuine human rights defenders in Zimbabwe.


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US Group Mounts Pressure On KP Over Marange Gems

http://www.radiovop.com

Harare, July 09, 2011 -United States based diamond trading group, Rapaport
Trade said Friday the Kimberley Process's United Arab Emirates (UAE) office
has released 14 packets of Marange diamonds for export as expected, but
warned members to seek clarification on the Chiadzwa gems as they are
plugged by controversy.

“The diamonds have been held in Dubai since November 2010 shortly after
arriving from Zimbabwe .The Rapaport group warns responsible buyers to
require written supplier guarantee that they are not selling Marange
diamonds,” Rapaport said in a note to members.

"While not all Marange polished diamonds have a greenish hue and not all the
green hue diamond are from Marange significant number of such Marange stones
are appearing on the market. All members of the trade should ask their
suppliers to do everything they can do to ensure that they are not supplied
Marange diamonds."

Rapaport did not disclose the value of the gems.

Last month, the KP meeting held in Democratic Republic of Congo gave Harare
the green light to sale the Marange gems, but the decision drew the ire of
other members such as the Canada and US government.

Even, diamond pressure groups within the civil society protested about the
authorisation of the selling of the Marange gems.

At the Kimberley meeting in Kinshasa on June 23, rights groups simply walked
out after the chairman, Mathieu Yamba of the Democratic Republic of Congo,
gave the green light to two companies to sell gems from Zimbabwe's Marange
fields.

Marange diamonds, touted as the find of the decade were in 2006, drew in
thousands of small-time miners in the eastern part of the country resulting
in Zimbabwe security forces moving in to restore order. Human rights
organisations and diamond players have said human rights were trampled of
the diamond panners.


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Four MDC Activists Released, Eight Still Remain In Custody

http://www.radiovop.com

Harare, July 09, 2011 - Zimbabwe High Court on Friday granted bail to four
more MDC activists facing trumped up charges of murdering a police inspector
in Glenview surburb more than a month ago.

The MDC said eight of their activists are still remanded in custody from a
total of 24 supporters who were arrested after police inspector; Petros
Mutedza was murdered after a brawl at a beer drinking pub in Glenview
surburb, Harare. The MDC argues the allegations are baseless.

"Four MDC members including Councillor Oddrey Sydney Chirombe were today
granted bail at the High Court," the MDC said Friday.

"The members granted bail today are; Jefias Moyo, Abina Rutsito and Tendai
Chinyama.  Councillor Chirombe, Rutsito and Moyo were granted a US$100 bail
each while Chinyama was given a US$300 bail by Justice Felistus Chatukuta.
Moyo and Rutsito are MDC employees."

Twelve MDC members including Last Maengahama, a member of the MDC National
Executive Council were granted bail last week Friday.

"Eight more MDC members still in remand prison.  They are; Councillor
Tungamirai Madzokere of Ward 32 Glen View, Rebecca Mafukeni, Yvonne
Musarurwa, Cynthia Manjoro, Edson Maengahama, Lazarus Maengahama, Lloyd
Chitanda, Stenford Mangwiro and Phineas Nhatarikwa," the party said.

In a related case, Oliver Mukombwe, the MDC Bindura district treasurer was
remanded in custody after the State invoked the draconian invoked the
notorious Section 121 of the Criminal Evidence and Procedure Act (CPEA), the
party said.

Mukombwe is facing charges of undermining police authority appeared at the
Bindura Magistrate’s court on Wednesday and was granted a US$20 bail.
However, the State invoked Section 121 of the CPEA, which suspends the bail
order for seven days pending the filing of an appeal by the State at the
High Court.

The MDC which is led by Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai has been
complaining that their supporters are targeted by state security
institutions. The party says the institutions support President Robert
Mugabe's Zanu (PF) party.

In the Global Political Agreement (GPA) discussions, the two main parties,
Zanu PF and MDC are heavily disagreeing on the need for security sector
reforms. The MDC wants state security institutions to be answerable to
parliament so that their operations are monitored.


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Death row backlog as Zimbabweans shun hangman role

http://www.telegraph.co.uk

A backlog of prisoners is building up on Zimbabwe’s death row because the
authorities are struggling to recruit a new hangman.

By Aislinn Laing, Johannesburg

10:34PM BST 08 Jul 2011

A total of 60 people are currently awaiting execution but since the country’s
previous executioner retired in 2005, no one has been found to take his
place.

Some have been waiting for more than 10 years to go to the gallows, and
campaigners say their sentences should now be commuted to life imprisonment
and the death penalty abolished.

Obert Gutu, the country’s Deputy Minister of Justice and a senator for the
Movement for Democratic Change which supports abolition, said many
Zimbabweans would not take the job for fear it would attract “evil spirits
to the hangman and his family”.

“In the African culture, a job that entails the killing of another human
being is not considered a job at all,” he said.

“It is looked at with contempt and superstition, mostly because as Africans,
we believe that if one kills another human being, the spirit of that person
will return to torment its killer and his family.”

He said that keeping people on death row perpetually was “inhumane” and he
hoped to see the death penalty abolished in the new constitution currently
being drafted by the coalition government of the MDC and Robert Mugabe’s
Zanu PF.

“It is not a job one can openly talk about, it is a gory job only those
deemed evil and cursed can ever want to do. Culturally, people shun the
spilling of human blood, whether the victim is guilty or innocent,” he said.

With a civil servant’s salary of just $3,600 (£2,200) a year, and a
requirement for a complete lack of mercy, the dearth of applicants would
hardly be surprising were it not for an unemployment rate in Zimbabwe of
between 70 and 95 per cent.

Since independence in 1980, 73 men have been hanged for offences of murder
and high treason.

The previous incumbent in the role, variously said to be a Malawian man or a
former Zambian police officer, is known to have struggled with his
conscience.

He retired after carrying out his last hanging in 2004, of Edmore Masendeke
and Stephen Chidhumo, armed robbers who broke out of Zimbabwe’s Chikurubi
Maximum Security Prison, killing a guard in the process.

Pedzisai Ruhanya, a human rights academic, said the practice of hanging was
“outdated”.

“Only the devil himself can do that job, not a normal human being,” he said.

“After all, the hangman is paid peanuts like the rest of civil servants. Is
US$300 a month enough for one to kill people for? Never. Zimbabweans should
refuse to take up this job.


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Mugabe accused of South Sudan 'hypocrisy'

http://www.newzimbabwe.com

09/07/2011 00:00:00
    by Staff Reporter

DESPITE arresting secessionists at home, President Robert Mugabe on Saturday
joined celebrations to mark South Sudan’s break-away from the north.

Under a blanket of moist, oppressive heat, tens of thousands gathered in a
field surrounding the mausoleum of John Garang, the late rebel army leader
who is considered the father of the nation, and shouted deliriously as the
flag of Sudan was lowered and that of South, raised.

The new President, Salva Kiir, signed a transitional constitution and then
took the oath of office. Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir, who is wanted on
charges of genocide in Darfur, looked on.

Mugabe joined United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, former US
Secretary of State Collin Powell, and other heads of state including South
Africa’s President Jacob Zuma and Uganda’s Yoweri Museveni to welcome the
55th African state.

“Zimbabwe is delighted that this day has come after a long day of struggle
by the people of Southern Sudan to achieve the objective of self rule and
independence,” Mugabe said.

"It's a day, which we celebrate not only because of the struggle, but also
after the struggle there was an agreement, which stipulated what had to be
done.”

Mugabe’s backing of the South Sudan state however, contrasts sharply with
his attitude towards calls for a separate Matabeleland state in south
western Zimbabwe where his government is accused of killing over 20,000
civilians during a sustained campaign of ethnic cleansing between 1982 and
1987.

In March, the leaders of the Mthwakazi Liberation Front, a fairly small but
vocal group advocating a break-away from Zimbabwe, were arrested and charged
with treason.

The London-based Zimbabwean academic Brilliant Mhlanga, a supporter of the
break-away movement, said Mugabe’s backing of a South Sudan state and his
brutal treatment of Mthwakazi Liberation Front leaders “smacks of hypocrisy”.
“Zimbabwe is a colonial structure. What Mugabe is doing is hypocritical,”
Mhlanga said.

“Mugabe cannot claim to be a Pan Africanist and yet go on to deny and even
persecute those advocating for a dismantling of colonial boundaries. There
is nothing that the Mthwakazi Liberation Front is advocating which is
un-African.

“Matabeleland people must also be allowed a referendum to decide their
future, and in this we expect Mugabe’s support since it’s part of the
decolonisation project which he claims to champion.”


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‘World should stop election losers from ruling’

http://www.dailynews.co.zw/

By Godfrey Mtimba in Belgium
Saturday, 09 July 2011 13:58

BRUSSELS - Joint African Pacific Caribbean and European Union (ACP-EU)
Parliament co-president David Matongo says the world should stop election
losers from refusing to leave office and seeking comfort in coalition
governments.

Matongo, a Zambian, gave President Robert Mugabe as an example of one such
leader.

Addressing delegates at the 26th ACP-EU social and economic meeting here,
Matongo described Zimbabwe’s shaky coalition government as “unacceptable and
undemocratic”.

He said it was worrying that election losers were rejecting results and
using violence to force the formation of “useless and unworkable” coalition
governments.

He spoke as Mugabe and coalition partner Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai
both concurred that their dysfunctional relationship was affecting the
economy.

“As the ACP-EU joint parliament president let me clearly state that we do
not support unity governments after someone loses elections.

If you lose elections get out. We want democracy and respect of the will of
the people in Africa,” said Matongo.

Matongo accused coalition governments of forcing people to legitimise
despots whose term of office would have been ended by the electorate.

He said the whole phenomenon was derailing the democratisation of the
African continent.

“At this juncture in time allow me dear colleagues to point out that
governments of national unity crafted hurriedly after disputed elections are
unacceptable and undemocratic for they tend to entrench despots whose era
and tenure of office ought to have come to an end.

This creates a deficit in the democracy we all yearn for in Africa,” he
added.

Matongo, who is MP for Pemba constituency in Zambia, expressed dismay at
Mugabe whom he accused of rejecting the people’s will.

He said Mugabe was promoting chaos in Africa because other leaders ended up
imitating him, giving the Ivory Coast crisis as a recent point in case.

“Such presidents like Mugabe who refuse to hand over power and form
coalition governments are a bad influence to other African leaders.

The recent case of Ivory Coast remind us of how bad those people who want to
cling on to power at all cost regardless of the impact on their people’s
lives and especially after they lost lections are.

The leader also wanted a coalition government just like in Zimbabwe and
Kenya,” he said.

Matongo urged the ACP and EU countries to withdraw support to the countries
with coalition governments as a way of pushing African leaders to move
towards democracy and do away with dictators whose continued stay in power
was contributing to Africa’s underdevelopment.

“These governments should not get support from ACP-EU and other
organisations because we will be supporting the continued stay of dictators
and tyrants who oppress people and slow down development in the continent.
Africa needs new young leaders who will bring fresh ideas and energy and
vitality in the continent,” Matongo said.


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The desperation of Mugabe’s CIO



Clifford Chitupa Mashiri, 09/07/11

Mugabe’s Central Intelligence Organisation (CIO) agents abroad are on a
mission abroad to instil fear and disrupt the anti-Mugabe movement in the
Diaspora. Among tactics they use are stalking bloggers (writers of internet
articles) and just being a nuisance. I know what I am talking about.

Among things of special interest to them are the motivation and drive behind
the new wave of online opinion papers written by Zimbabweans exercising
their freedom of expression to criticise Mugabe’s dictatorship and to
educate people by challenging Zanu-pf propaganda. The regime is still very
afraid of a Tunisia and is not leaving anything to chance.

One of the things that has irritated the leadership of the much-hated spy
organisation is the courage of people to engage the regime in a no-holds
barred global confrontation through the internet and independent radio
stations.

So worried is the regime that it is desperately trying to find out if
bloggers are being financed in their ever-growing attacks on the regime.
What the CIO does not know is that not all Zimbabweans are motivated by
money in their quest for a democratic, stable, non-racial and progressive
country.

What is surprising the CIO is the fact that the cyber warfare against Mugabe’s
dictatorship is growing faster and in a very focused way by targeting the
regime’s propaganda which it uses to mislead people.

While their bosses back home are busy engaged in illicit deals involving
precious minerals, CIO spies are wondering why some Zimbabweans are working
tirelessly if they are not paid for expressing their opinions freely outside
Zimbabwe’s borders.

In 2008 CIO spies stepped up their surveillance of Harare-based Western
embassies and aid agencies it suspects of co-ordinating funding for the
opposition (The Zimbabwean, 01/03/08). That was an election year and they
had reason to worry about opposition to Mugabe. Top on their list of the aid
agencies they were targeting were Germany’s humanitarian foundations
Friedrich Ebert Stiftung (FES) and Friedrich Naumann Foundation.

Others on the CIO list of surveillance were ZLHR, ZDHR, LSA, NCA, Crisis in
Zimbabwe Coalition, ZINASU, Hivos, CIDA, DANIDA, MSO, NORAD, USAID, WFP and
DfID. WOZA women also said they were being stalked by the CIO.
Fixed telephone lines at virtually all the suspected aid agencies and
embassies were bugged by the CIO. Journalists were not spared the
surveillance during the CIOGATE (NewZimbabwe, 11/12/09). The CIO hatched a
plan to harm journalists who had exposed their dirty plans.

In the UK Mugabe’s spies are active regardless of the laws of the host
country. According to Guy Talyor , “often these agents pose as asylum
seekers, completely fooling the UK border agency and judges of the
immigration tribunals,” ( Mugabe’s spying on Britain, 20 May 2011,
http://nzcn.wordpress.com).

It is common knowledge that there are some CIO agents in the UK, some of who
were making life so difficult for Zimbabwe opposition supporters based in
Southend and elsewhere pretend to be seeking asylum or students. What the
CIO does not know is that we alert others about their presence and evil
activities once we have identified them.

©Clifford Chitupa Mashiri, Political Analyst, zimanalysis2009@gmail.com


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Seven Degrees

http://www.cathybuckle.com

July 9, 2011, 12:05 pm

Dear Family and Friends,

Winter crept in under the door this week, just when we thought it had
forgotten us. In twenty four hours the day time temperature plummeted from
the mid twenties to a bitter seven degrees Celsius and Zimbabwe shivered. As
the mist and wind swept in and swallowed my neighbourhood, the electricity
went off and plunged us into the cold and dark.

In my home town the electricity supplier, ZESA, said it was load shedding
when we phoned, even when we told them it was a fault. The problem was a
main overhead power cable which had woken the whole neighbourhood when it
broke at around five in the morning. Crackling, banging, flaring and
sparking, the cable had snapped in two places and then fell along and across
a small suburban road. It took a telephone cable down with it and finally
came to a rest on a neighbour's steel gate. What a mess it was and extremely
dangerous. After repeated calls to ZESA telling them there was a live cable
lying on a man's gate and along a few hundred metres of suburban road, they
finally arrived three hours later, at 8.30 in the morning. By lunch time the
cable was still lying across the tar road and ZESA had left a team of tree
cutters to remove branches that were touching the overhead cables. The usual
absurd and extremely frustrating conversation between residents and ZESA
workers wasn't long in coming.

'Why don't you come any do any maintenance on these lines anymore," we
asked.

'Aaah, we don't have money,' was the reply.

'But if you came and trimmed the trees every year, like you used to, the
cables wouldn't get weakened and break and it wouldn't lead to such
expensive repairs.'

There was no reply. It's been at least six years since ZESA have gone around
my neighbourhood clearing vegetation and brush from around their poles and
transformers or trimmed tree branches growing too close to the lines.
Someone pointed to the shoulder high dry grass and scrubby bush growing
right up to the ZESA switching box. Last year a bush fire in exactly this
spot had caused an explosion in the box, the melted green paint proof of the
near tragedy that we had all rushed to avert, extinguishing flames with
branches and sacks.

Just a few metres away the branches of a large eucalyptus tree blowing and
swaying in between the overhead power cables were easily visible.

'While you've got the workers and the ladders here, will you at least trim
the eucalyptus branches,' we asked.

'Another time,' came the reply. It's exactly the same response they gave us
when we made the same request about the same tree a year ago.

That response was about as comforting as the mid year statement made by the
Chairman of the Zimbabwe Power Company a few days ago. Mr Maasdorp said :
"the only way to compensate for a sub-economic tariff is to cut back on
maintenance and ongoing refurbishment. This is clearly not sustainable and
if the situation is not addressed urgently, the lights you have from time to
time today will go out tomorrow!"

Not mentioned in the Chairman's public mid year statement was the recent
report in The Zimbabwean newspaper that farmers on seized farms owed ZESA
eighty million US dollars in unpaid bills and wanted government to give them
more financial support. While they're at it, I'm sure a couple of million
urban residents won't mind government paying their electricity bills either!

Until next time, thanks for reading, love cathy

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