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Zimbabwe government in turmoil as vote looms

Associated Press

By ANGUS SHAW, Associated Press – 5 hours ago

HARARE, Zimbabwe (AP) — Legislators have yet to rewrite Zimbabwe's
constitution more than two years after a historic power-sharing agreement
between longtime enemies. At least a quarter of the people on the country's
voter lists are in fact dead.

In recent months, Zimbabwe's government has been paralyzed by fresh disputes
and bickering over power-sharing ahead of proposed elections. President
Robert Mugabe joined forces with the opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai in
an unlikely coalition government after violence-plagued elections in 2008.

At present, "nothing is happening. Little work is being done," said John
Makumbe, a political scientist at the main Zimbabwe university.

Mugabe wants to hold a vote this year to end the tumultuous power-sharing
government with Tsvangirai. But the prime minister's party says real reform
is needed before such an election can be held.

Now authorities are arresting ministers who don't belong to Mugabe's party.
Some Mugabe hardliners are even calling for the longtime opposition
leader-turned-prime minister to be charged with treason.

Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights said Tuesday that police are following a
"well-laid plan" to clamp down on Mugabe's opponents, including a slew of
recent arrests of ministers and officials of the former opposition.

Makumbe said the clampdown against ministers in Tsvangirai's party in recent
weeks is likely meant to provoke Tsvangirai into pulling out of the
coalition so that early elections can be held.

Mugabe has called for elections this year to bring the coalition to an end
once and for all.

But Tsvangirai is unlikely to pull out. He has repeatedly vowed at recent
meetings and rallies that his party will not withdraw, even if he is
arrested, jailed or killed.

Regional leaders and the chief mediator on Zimbabwe, South African President
Jacob Zuma, also insist free and fair elections cannot be held this year
until electoral and constitutional reforms are completed.

Tsvangirai's party is demanding a complete overhaul of the voters' register
before any polls.

Earlier this month, coalition negotiators agreed on what they called a
"roadmap" to elections that included reforms of the media and security laws
by the end of this year. But Mugabe's negotiators ruled out reforms of the
security and intelligence services demanded by Tsvangirai to make them
independent and nonpartisan.

A forensic analysis of existing voters lists by computer experts has shown
wide disparities — up to 25 percent of named voters are dead and the lists
include nonagenarians and centenarians presumed dead as well as children
under the voting age of 18.

Still, negotiators slated elections before the end of next year, depending
on how and when other conditions are met, leaving the actual date
unspecified.

But Zimbabwe's political future remains unknown as infighting persists.

Hardliners of Mugabe's party have called for the prime minister to be tried
on treason charges over his party's links with Western nations that seek
Mugabe's ouster after years of violations of human and democratic rights.
Military chiefs and former guerrillas in the bush war that swept Mugabe to
power in 1980, have refused to salute Tsvangirai, calling him a security
threat.

Makumbe said if Mugabe destroyed the coalition, called elections on his own
terms and stayed in control, southern Africa would "wash its hands of him,"
and the 87-year-old would risk further international isolation, along with
isolation from key African allies for the first time.

"He will not get away with it. It wouldn't be recognized. The biggest
problem would then be our neighbors closing their borders," Makumbe said.


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ZANU PF misleading nation on security sector reform

http://www.swradioafrica.com

By Tichaona Sibanda
13 July 2011

A security and defence expert has said the main key to security sector
reform is to ensure the armed forces don’t influence the electoral process
in favour of one particular party.

Dr Martin Rupiya told SW Radio Africa on Wednesday that it is not correct to
suggest security sector reforms (SSR) are part of a regime change agenda by
those opposed to ZANU PF.

He said SSR is the set of policies, plans, programs and activities that a
government undertakes to improve the way it provides safety, security and
justice to its citizens.

But ZANU PF has flatly refused to countenance security sector reforms,
arguing they are designed to oust Robert Mugabe from power.

The MDC has demanded these reforms saying the military junta led by Mugabe
loyalists has powers that put them above the law and that blocked the
transfer of power when Mugabe lost the Presidential election to Morgan
Tsvangirai three years ago.

Instead of serving the population the country’s army, police, CIO and
airforce are used by ZANU PF to oppress Mugabe’s opponents. The Junta has
been the most important instrument through which Mugabe and ZANU PF have
maintained power since independence.

‘The reform of this sector is very important in order to break with the
past. Zimbabwe is in this situation of an inclusive government because of
the intervention by the security sector soon after the overwhelming vote for
change by Zimbabweans in 2008,’ Rupiya said.

He added: ‘The overall objective of SSR is to provide and promote an
effective and legitimate public service by the armed forces that is
transparent, accountable to civilian authority and not what has been peddled
by ZANU PF.’

Having been allowed to operate with impunity for almost 30 years the MDC-T
now wants Parliament to debate how government can control the operations of
the armed forces.

Settlement Chikwinya, the MDC-T MP for Mbizvo in KweKwe, was due to bring
forward a motion in Parliament on Wednesday to discuss the army chiefs,
calling on them to stop interfering in politics. At the time of our news
deadline, discussions in parliament were ongoing and no information had
emerged as to what had happened.

‘The issue is that we want Parliament to ensure these service chiefs
reaffirm loyalty to the constitution and the laws of Zimbabwe such as the
Defence Forces, the Police Act and Prisons Act,’ Chikwinya said.

Analysts believe that reforming the security sector in emerging democracies
is one of the most important and difficult activities facing any government.


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Parliament to probe generals

http://www.dailynews.co.zw

By Reagan Mashavave, Senior Writer
Wednesday, 13 July 2011 12:38

HARARE - The appetite by military generals to influence political processes
is set to come under parliamentary probe, barely three weeks after
Brigadier-General Douglas Nyikayaramba described Prime Minister Morgan
Tsvangirai as a national security threat.

A notice has already been given to the House of Assembly that a motion on
the probe will be moved today.

Mbizo MP, Settlement Chikwinya of MDC is expected to move the motion, which
is most likely to meet fierce opposition from Zanu PF MPs.

But the superior number of the two MDC formations over Zanu PF in Parliament
will ensure the motion is debated and adopted.

Chikwinya’s notice to the House of Assembly is meant to push Parliament to
make security chiefs re-affirm their loyalty to the constitution of Zimbabwe
following a disturbing run of statements by securocrats that Tsvangirai has
described as a “silent coup”.

He said the Constitution of Zimbabwe, as contained in the Defence Act
Chapter 11.02, the Police Act Chapter 11.00, Prison Act Chapter 7.11 and the
Public Service Act Chapter 11.04, demands the “neutrality of the military,
police and prison officers and the Central Intelligence Organisation (CIO)
as well as ordinary civil servants”Parliament probes generals.

debate because it calls for Cabinet to investigate statements made by
security chiefs that are against the Defence Act and other laws that the
military personnel take oath to obey.

Military generals enjoy close proximity to President Robert Mugabe, with
some of them saying they would “do anything” to ensure the 87-year-old
remains in power.

Speaking to the Daily News after giving the notice yesterday, Chikwinya said
the purpose of the motion was to re-affirm to the people of Zimbabwe that
the military serves allegiance to the Constitution of Zimbabwe.

Nyikayaramba last month told the media that the military would remain
pro-Mugabe and Zanu PF. In statements that have sent shivers, Nyikayaramba
said Tsvangirai was not a political threat but a “national security threat”.

The statements by Nyikayaramba are not new. Other serving service chiefs
like general Constantine Chiwenga, Air Marshal Perence Shiri, prisons chief
Paradzai Zimondi and police commissioner general Augustine Chihuri have
openly said they will not salute any president elected by the people of
Zimbabwe who do not have war of liberation credentials.

The statements are viewed as aimed at Tsvangirai, who beat Mugabe in the
March 2008 elections but failed to take power and was forced into a
coalition.

Security sector reforms are covered under article XIII of the power sharing
Global Political Agreement states that the institutions should be “impartial
in the discharge of their duties” and that they must perform their duties
ethically and professionally in conformity with the principles and
requirements of a multi-party democratic system.

The three main parties — Zanu PF and the two MDC formations agreed to
improve the curriculum of military training in the country to include human
rights, international law and statute law and for the military personnel to
fully understand their roles and duties in a multi-party democratic system.

A serving army colonel Bassie Bangidza last month told a security sector
reform debate that parliament was not the best avenue to tackle the matter.

Bangidza, the director for the Centre for Defence Studies at the University
of Zimbabwe questioned parliament’s effectiveness in handling such a
“sensitive” issue.

“Parliamentarians are interested in party political interests and party
discipline. At individual level, the parliamentarians are often eager to
remain in the good books of influential officials of the decision making
branch both civilian and security sector,” he said.

“They want more about maintaining good relations with the President or Prime
Minister rather than looking after the interests of those who elected them
including the security sector,” Bangidza said. “Parliamentary oversight of
the security sector often comes across as being ornamental, rubberstamp or
appendages of their respective executives (political parties).”

Bangidza warned that if the “security sector reforms” were done in an
ill-manner that may worsen civil and military relations or result in
political instability.

Another presenter at the same debate, Wilfred Mhanda, a former liberation
war commander castigated members of the uniformed forces who made political
statements.

He said the military must be apolitical and that they must remain loyal to
the nation.

He said the nation “commands the gun and never must the gun be allowed to
command the nation”.

“The military serve us. They are our servants and they are not our masters.
We cannot only discuss their conditions of service and not about their
conduct.“

"Parliament cannot only discuss about giving them uniform and food and not
about their conduct. It does not make sense. They have to take both into
account. They are our servants because they are paid by the tax-payer, they
are accountable to us,” said Mhanda, now a Mugabe critic.


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Secret doc outlines plans to destroy MDC

http://www.thezimbabwean.co.uk

A secret document outlining an alleged Zanu (PF) strategy to infiltrate the
"opposition" by next year's presidential elections has been obtained by The
Zimbabwean.
13.07.1101:28pm
Staff Reporter

The document, which was circulated last month before the recent smear
campaign on MDC officials, was obtained from a usually reliable source and
some of its plans are already underway.

Already, a sting operation against MDC secretary general Tendai Biti is
underway. CIO has asked Econet to intercept Biti's cellphone and provide a
call log. Already he has been accused of having a fling with a married
woman. He is instituting legal action against one state newspaper that made
the sensational claims.

There is another elaborate strategy against the Prime Minister, who remains
single following his wife's death two years ago. The document outlines a
plan to use women as bait.

Zanu (PF) spokesman Rugare Gumbo declined to comment on "rubbish". "I am not
interested in talking about something that is not ours. I do not want
counter-intelligence where you produce your own documents and want us to
comment on it," he said.

The document outlines a plan to thoroughly investigate and systematically
harass and mentally torture the MDC until they are "destabilised, until they
give in and give up." It also says: "The opposition should be systematically
infiltrated with highly paid people to cause infighting."

Strategies outlined in the document include negative press reporting and the
disappearance without trace of "sell-outs" in rural areas.

The document promises "rewards" if MDC is brought to its knees and says
there will be no prosecution for politically motivated crimes. It also
proposes more funding for the Zanu (PF)-backed Zimbabwe Federation of Trade
Unions to undermine the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions, and proposes
parallel NGOs to counter Zimbabwe's vocal civil society.


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High Court reserves judgement in Biti's phone records case

http://www.swradioafrica.com

By Tererai Karimakwenda
13 July, 2011

The High Court on Wednesday reserved judgment in an application by the
Finance Minister Tendai Biti, who is seeking to block the release of his
mobile phone records to the police. The serious fraud squad at the Criminal
Investigation Department claim they are investigating Biti for “abuse of
office,” allegations that the Minister has dismissed as harassment.

Harare provincial Magistrate, Mishrod Guvamombe, had last week issued the
police a warrant ordering Econet Wireless to release the Minister’s phone
history. Biti’s lawyers immediately appealed to the High Court, saying the
records contain “vital information” about the MDC-T and other organizations
he is involved with.

Biti is also secretary general of the MDC-T, who is supposed to be a partner
with ZANU PF in the coalition government. But he has been the target of
attacks by ZANU PF mobs that twice descended on his Harare office. Unknown
assailants also petrol bombed his home in Harare last month. The MDC-T have
said the continued harassment of officials and supporters is a ZANU PF ploy
to destabilize the coalition government.

As reported this week on SW Radio Africa the state owned Sunday Mail
newspaper published an article some weeks ago, claiming Biti was having an
affair with an economist in his Ministry. The paper revealed phone numbers
which it claimed were used by Biti to communicate with the alleged mistress.

Five officials from the Finance Ministry were also arrested last week, one
of them being the woman the state media is alleging had the affair with
Biti.

As has recently been reported, the CIO have come up with yet another plan to
discredit the MDC. This one is to expose real or imagined sexual escapades
of the top leadership.


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Zimbabwe banks want to clean dirty dollars

http://www.timeslive.co.za/

Sapa-AFP | 13 July, 2011 14:31

Banks in Zimbabwe have urged the public to deposit money in their accounts,
so that soiled, torn and defaced dollar bills can be exchanged for clean,
new notes, a state daily reported.

"Old notes continue to be in circulation because people are not banking
money so that old notes can be repatriated and new ones are brought into
circulation," Bankers Association of Zimbabwe chairman John Mushayavanhu
said, according to The Herald newspaper.

"The notes can be exchanged free of charge."

The association's call came following public complaints that some shops,
buses and cell phone airtime vendors were refusing to accept torn or defaced
US bills.

Zimbabwe allowed trade in US dollars in 2009, after abandoning its own
currency which was left worthless after years of hyperinflation.

Lower value notes are easily torn and defaced because they pass through many
hands, but rarely pass through banks, which can replace old notes with new
ones.

The Reserve Bank estimates that $2.5 billion (1.8 billion euros) is in
circulation in Zimbabwe, most of it in the informal market because the
public lost faith in banks during the economic crisis.

For years banks suffered a chronic liquidity crisis, leaving them unable to
provide cash to people seeking to make withdrawals.

Hyperinflation also made banking counter-productive, because the value of
money would erode dramatically between the time of deposit and the
withdrawal.

Last week police warned the public about conmen who were using fake US
dollar notes to buy goods in rural areas and along highways and getting
change in genuine notes.


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Human Rights Commission Bill ready for parliament

http://www.swradioafrica.com

By Tererai Karimakwenda
13 July, 2011

A Bill that will finally bring to life the Zimbabwe Human Rights Commission
(ZHRC) was due to be presented to parliament by Justice Minister Patrick
Chinamasa this week. But civic groups have already dismissed the Commission,
which was appointed by Robert Mugabe and Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai 15
months ago, because political parties in the unity government agreed to
limit its mandate to abuses that occurred after February, 2009.

The GPA required the establishment of a rights commission, to safeguard
human rights, investigate past abuses and to promote national healing. But
as it stands the most violent periods in the country’s history are excluded.
It means thugs and militia groups aligned to ZANU PF will never be brought
to justice for the horrendous crimes committed during the Gukurahundi and
the extreme election violence of 2008.

Phillip Pasirayi from the Crisis Coalition told SW Radio Africa that the
idea of a national commission to advance the cause of human rights is “good
in principle”, but the way it was done is “problematic”. “It was ZANU PF and
the MDC formations that agreed to the names to sit on that commission, which
means they are now answerable to those parties,” Pasirayi explained.

“It does not help to create an institution whose mandate is limited. They
must be able to tackle all past abuses that affected our people. Before 2009
there were extra-judicial killings, disappearances and rapes,” he added.

Pasirayi pointed to the Gukurahundi atrocities that claimed thousands of
lives in the mid-eighties and Operation Murambatsvina, ZANU PF’s so-called
“cleanup” exercise that displaced nearly a million people and destroyed the
lives and incomes of so many.

Regarding the MDC role in drafting the Bill, Pasirayi said he was surprised
because the party was a product of civic groups that stand for protecting
human rights. “The party also suffered tremendously during the 2008 election
period, with hundreds killed and thousands assaulted or tortured” the
activist explained.

Ironically the MDC has objected to the composition of other commissions,
including the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission and the Zimbabwe Media
Commission, saying they were unilaterally appointed by ZANU PF.

After an initial reading in parliament the Human Rights Commission Bill will
be turned over to the Parliamentary Legal Committee, which checks to ensure
that it is consistent with the Constitution. A vote will then be taken by
both houses of parliament before the Bill is handed over to Robert Mugabe to
be signed into law.


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Zim Legislators Demand New Cars

http://www.radiovop.com/

Harare, July 13, 2011 - Zimbabwe’s parliamentarians are demanding brand new
cars from its cash strapped coalition government arguing that the ones that
they have suffered depreciation when they were used during the constitution
making process outreach programme.

The demands are coming from both members of the lower and the upper houses
of all the country’s three political parties namely Zanu (PF) and the two
Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) formations.

In this rare show of unity, the parliamentarians say they want the
government to buy them each a Nissan 4x4 pick-up truck worth a princely sum
of between $US 10 000 and US$ 15000.

The decision was made at a parliamentary joint caucus meeting on Tuesday.

The demand for new cars comes despite the fact that the parliamentarians
were paid for the use and maintenance of their vehicles during the
constitutional outreach programme.

Kudakwashe Bhasikiti, Zanu (PF) MP for Mwenezi East constituency, the
Secretary General of the Joint Parliament Welfare Committee said in a brief
to journalists that the demands by the MPs are reasonable and have already
been tabled before Minister of Finance Tendai Biti who is expected to
present the matter before the leaders of the three political parties for
consideration.

“The MPs are asking government to replace their vehicles and the reason
being that MPs were using their vehicles during constitutional outreach
programme and some of them have lost their cars which are now a completely
right off,” said Bhasikiti.

“Others have their vehicles badly damaged and the cost of the maintenance is
too high and beyond their reach, and it will better to have a new vehicle.
We use these vehicles to do parliamentary and government business in our
various constituencies.”

The car park at parliament is full of broken down top of the range vehicles,
others are accident damaged. A parliamentary official who mans the main
vehicle entrance to parliament building told Radio VOP that the vehicles
belong to parliamentarians.

Apart from the new cars the parliamentarians have also been demanding their
sitting allowances since they were elected into office in March 2008.

Bhasikiti said they expected a favourable response from the executive
otherwise anything short of the purchase of new vehicles would affect their
constituency work. He so urgent is the need for new cars because some
parliamentarians are already commuting to do their constituency work and
attend parliament in Harare.


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MDC-T Appeals To Parliament, Zanu (PF) Calls For GNU's End

http://www.radiovop.com

Harare, July 13, 2011 - Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai’s co-governing
Movement for Democratic Change party (MDC-T) has asked parliament to force
the country’s partisan security forces to stop meddling in the country’s
political affairs and to investigate “treasonous” statements uttered by some
senior members of the security sector.

Party legislator for Mbizo constituency Settlement Chikwinya on Tuesday
moved a lower House motion saying the MDC-T was concerned with apparent
threats directed at the party's leader Tsvangirai made by the security
chiefs.

In the motion expected to be debated in Parliament on Wednesday, Chikwinya
called “upon this house to condemn the unconstitutional and treasonous
statements that bring into disrepute the professional institutions of the
army and the police.”

The motion also “request the relevant institutions to reaffirm their loyalty
to the Constitution and the laws of Zimbabwe,” and to “direct relevant
authorities to carry out investigations into the said utterances and the
unconstitutional statements.”

This follows recent utterances by the army’s Brigadier General Douglas
Nyikayaramba who insisted the army viewed Tsvangirai as a major security
threat.

"Tsvangirai doesn't pose a political threat in any way in Zimbabwe, but is a
major security threat," Nyikayaramba told the state-owned Herald newspaper
recently. "He takes instructions from foreigners who seek to effect illegal
regime change in Zimbabwe. This is what has invited the security forces to
be involved because we want to protect our national security interests."

But Chikwinya, in a motion that was seconded by party chief whip Innocent
Gonese, described the utterances as “unconstitutional”.

Reads part of the motion,“...that this house takes note of the provisions of
the constitution, the defence act, chapter 11.02, the police act chapter
11.10, prison act chapter 7.11 and the public service act
chapter 11.04 which all demand neutrality of the military, police and prison
officers and the Central Intelligence Organisation (CIO) as well as ordinary
civil servants.”

Meanwhile a Member of Parliament from President Robert Mugabe's party told
parliament on Tuesday that unity government must be ended to allow for a new
government to run the economy without disagreements as is happening in the
unity government.

Mwenezi West MP, Munyaradzi Bhasikiti made the statement in parliament on
Tuesday as the House of Assembly was debating the low civil servants
salaries and ways that government can improve them. Mugabe at one time has
called for the end to the coalition government formed in 2009 saying they
were too many disagreements.

On the debate on civil service salaries several MPs said revenue from
diamonds sales, government departments and other minerals must be submitted
to treasury so that salaries for the public service be improved.

Other legislators said government must remove 'ghost workers' who are
receiving salaries every month when they are not properly employed. About 70
000 ghost workers are said to be on the government payroll. Finance Minister
Tendai biti has said that revenue that is being paid to ghost workers can
improve the civil service salaries.

"This creature is continously driving our nation to the dustbin. You can't
have the President saying on one hand civil servants must be awarded salary
increases, the Prime Minister on the other hand says again that salaries for
civil servants must be improved and a cabinet minister Tendai Biti says he
does not have money. This GNU has failed, let the economy be run by an
elected government," Bhasikiti said.

"Investors will not come to the country when people are divided that the
country must move to the left while the others are saying we move to the
right. Parliamentarians are the worst enemies of the civil servants. You
allowed a budget to be passed without the civil servants salaries being
increased."

In a related debate Willias Madzimure, Kambuzuma MP said the issue of the
civil servants salaries is not a Ministry of Finance issue but involves the
cabinet. He urged MP's to summon Biti to find out if the government has
enough revenue for civil servants salaries.


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Matombo's fate hangs in balance

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

By Staff Writer
Wednesday, 13 July 2011 15:15

HARARE - Incumbent ZCTU president Lovemore Matombo’s fate in the labour
movement hangs in the balance after a general council meeting held over the
weekend deferred deliberations on his quest for re-election.

Matombo has been at the helm of the union since 2000 after succeeding the
late Gibson Sibanda.

He is supposed to relinquish his post this year as constitutional amendments
done in 2006 limit presidential terms to two.

Matombo is refusing to leave, arguing that the amendments were done after he
had already completed his first term hence the changes cannot be effected in
retrospect.

ZCTU acting secretary-general Japhet Moyo told the Daily News that the
general council shelved deliberations regarding Matombo’s fate.

Sources say another meeting will be held before the congress to discuss
Matombo’s fate although chances are that he will be allowed to run for
another term.

Moyo said it was premature to talk about contesting candidates because
nominations were yet to be opened.

“The nomination for the candidates contesting for the posts is yet to be
opened. The issue of Matombo and Lucia Matibenga wanting to contest for the
presidency will be known when nominations are made,” said Moyo.

ZCTU will be holding its elective congress from 19-20 August in Bulawayo
under the theme “respect our rights, save our economy”.

Efforts to get a comment from Matombo were fruitless as he was not picking
up his phone.

According to the amended ZCTU constitution, an elected president is allowed
to hold office for two terms only.
Matombo has previously accused the labour body’s secretariat of doctoring
the constitution to stop him from running for a third term.

Sources within the labour movement told the Daily News that the idea to
amend the constitution was muted in 1996 when Prime Minister Morgan
Tsvangirai was the secretary-general but the changes were only adopted at a
congress held in Masvingo 10 years later.

“The chairperson of that 2006 meeting was Lucia Matibenga, who is the first
vice president of ZCTU. Matombo was attending a funeral so he was not there
but he was aware of the amendments,” said the source.

If allowed to stand for re-election, Matombo will square off with MDC
national executive committee member and Kuwadzana West MP Lucia Matibenga
and second vice secretary-general George Nkiwane.

Another influential post up for grabs is the secretary-general’s job.

Incumbent Wellington Chibebe is leaving Harare for Brussels where he will
take up the deputy secretary-general’s post at the International Trade Union
Confederation.

Acting secretary-general  Moyo is likely to battle it out with militant
Progressive Teachers Union of Zimbabwe secretary-general Raymond Majongwe.

Like Moyo, Majongwe has confirmed interest in the job.


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Gumede stands firm on explosive match fixing report

http://www.swradioafrica.com

By Lance Guma
13 July 2011

Zimbabwean football has been rocked by what is now known as the Asiagate
scandal, where players, coaches, journalists and football officials were
paid huge bribes to cover up for the fact that the country’s national team,
and at times a bogus one, was deliberately losing matches hosted in Asia as
part of a betting scam.

Zimbabwe Football Association (ZIFA) Vice President Ndumiso Gumede led a
four member committee which started investigating the matter last year and
later produced an explosive 162 page report. Under investigation were trips
by the senior and junior national teams and Monomotapa between 2007 and
2009.

Gumede, a guest on our Question Time programme, says he stands firmly behind
the findings of his committee despite some of those implicated denying the
allegations. Herald Sports Editor Robson Sharuko for example denied
receiving any money and called into question the number of trips he is
listed as having participated in and claimed it showed the information could
not be relied upon.

A fired up Gumede said ‘there might be a problem here. Mr Sharuko is saying
he went on 14 or 15 trips. We are not worried about how many trips he went
on. Our brief was to find out how many times he benefited. So he might have
gone on one trip where four games were played. In our report it will show
four benefits accrued to him.”

Gumede conceded they might not have investigated as well as they wanted but
this was because there were no records at ZIFA or even the sports
commission. They had to rely on information from newspapers and information
from the civil aviation authority, about who had travelled for example.

Former ZIFA Chief Henrietta Rushwaya has been fingered as the alleged
mastermind and is reported to have pocketed way over US$450 000. Despite her
high profile role she has still not been arrested, despite ZIFA giving the
report to the police, FIFA, the African football body (CAF), the Sports
Commission and the Ministry of Education, Art, Sports and Culture.

“The police have our report and it’s up to them to follow the people. If
there is any criminal component to my report, it is them who should follow
up. I have no arresting powers,” Gumede told us.

Decorated coaches like Sunday Chidzambwa, Luke Masomere, Rodwell Dhlakama,
Methembe Ndlovu and Norman Mapeza have been sucked into the scandal, having
travelled with the teams on different occasions during their spells as
coaches.

Chidzambwa, now coaching newly promoted Black Leopards in South Africa,
threatened to sue over the story. Gumede said he was unfazed by this and
said: ‘The truth is that there are people who went with him (Chidzambwa) who
have been truthful, whose conscience worries them, who have told us the
truth, including that Mr Chidzambwa bought a car in Singapore with the
proceeds he irregularly got.”

Gumede meanwhile told us they have recommended that the players be dealt
with leniently because not all of them knew the games were fixed. He said as
a committee they categorized people by how many trips they took part in.
“Those who went on more than two trips knew what was happening and they were
deriving benefit from it,” he said.


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Mugabe appoints new deputy spy chief

http://www.thezimbabwean.co.uk

President Robert Mugabe has appointed Aaron Daniel Tonde Nhepera as the
Deputy Director General of the Central Intelligence Organisation (CIO)
replacing the late Maynard Muzariri Announcing the appointment, Minister of
State for National Security Sydney Sekeramayi said Nhepera's elevation was
in line with his loyalty and dedication to duty.
13.07.1110:04am
Fungai Kwaramba Harare

"The elevation of Nhepera to his new position is not only in keeping with
the principle of continuity, but recognition of his commitment and
dedication to duty," said Minister Sekeramayi.

Indeed it has been a long wait for Nhepera who true to the state security
modus operedi has maintained a low profile.

With liberation war credentials Nhepera has been serving the detested CIO as
director security and was the longest serving director in the CIO until his
latest appointment


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EU fed up with Mugabe’s ruinous policies

http://www.thezimbabwean.co.uk

A top European Union official said this week the 27-nation group is fed up
with the ruinous policies of President Robert Mugabe, who they hope will
either quit office soon or lose the next crunch ballot to extricate the
country from the doldrums.
11.07.1104:19pm
Chief Reporter

Geoffrey Van Orden MEP, who spearheads the European Parliament's campaign
for freedom and democratic change in Zimbabwe, told The Zimbabwean that EU
member states now firmly believed that Zimbabwe would be better off without
Mugabe.

He said EU budgetary aid to Zimbabwe, and that from other multilateral
institutions, would remain frozen as long as Mugabe remained in power and
persisted with his violent seizures now targeting Western mines and banks.

"We are completely fed up with Mugabe. He has stayed long enough in power
and we think Zimbabwe would be better off without him," Van Orden said from
Brussels.

Van Orden is a Conservative member of the European Parliament and Defence
and Security Spokesman. Over many years he has initiated the European
Parliament's tough resolutions on Zimbabwe. He has been personally banned by
Mugabe from entering Zimbabwe.
Future hope

He said the situation in Zimbabwe continued to be “most disturbing”, but
expressed hope about the future. He said he was aware of the recent upsurge
in violence and intimidation against those that Mugabe fears.

“But at last, Zimbabwe's neighbours have begun to demand action," he said.

Van Orden spoke as Mugabe's partisan police force arrested three ministers
from the rival MDC faction in the GNU. It is just the latest crackdown by
Mugabe on his rivals, who are moving to close ranks and mount a united front
against the ageing despot.

He said he was encouraged by SADC's increasingly tough action on Mugabe and
the regional bloc's stance to draw the line in the sand.

"We know what happened during election time when opponents were murdered and
opposition party supporters harassed. Mugabe has openly supported
lawlessness. That’s very wrong."
End to violence

He said it was heartening that SADC "has called for an end to all political
violence and for free, democratic elections that meet international
standards."

But Presidential spokesman George Charamba said the government would not
lose much sleep over his remarks.

"He has come under a spell of the British anti-land redistribution element.
He wants to give the British position a veneer of EU endorsement. He has
unsuccessfully tried to have more sanctions imposed on Zimbabwe in the
past," he said in Harare.

"He is part of the conservative side of the EU that wants to equate land
redistribution to the quest for democracy. To them democracy should exist to
the whites only and not to blacks. We won’t lose sleep over his remarks."

Charamba said the policy of the EU remained that of constructive engagement
with the Zimbabwe government and not "destructive disengagement as advocated
by Van Orden".
Intransigent

Van Orden said it was sad to note that despite numerous exhortations from
key donors for Mugabe to restore the rule of law in Zimbabwe, he had
remained intransigent.

"The sad thing is that Zimbabweans will have to suffer for the actions of a
wayward leader," he said. "Elections cannot be judged free in an atmosphere
of intimidation and where the media does not give expression to all
opinions. The people need education in the electoral process and a proper
system of voter registration needs to begin very soon."

He said Zimbabwe would not get any new budgetary aid under the Cotonou pact
because of the government’s persistent trashing of human rights.

The EU’s aid to Zimbabwe was halted a decade ago over the breakdown of the
rule of law in the country. The EU joined the United States and key
international donors such as the International Monetary Fund and the World
Bank which cut aid over the economy’s mismanagement.

The EU has nonetheless continued to fund projects aimed at alleviating
poverty, especially in Zimbabwe’s health and education sectors.
Cotonou pact

He said Zimbabwe was missing out big time on funding under the Cotonou
Agreement between the EU and ACP group.

The Cotonou accord governs trade relations between the EU and the ACP.

It is the successor to the Lome Convention which previously governed trade
ties between the two regions.

Without Mugabe, Zimbabwe would be eligible to access the EU's 13,5 billion
euro set aside for ACP states under the 9th European Development Fund, the
aid component of the Cotonou trade pact.

The pact has a specific clause stipulating that individual countries that
are seriously corrupt or disregard human rights will be excluded from aid
programmes. Van Orden said Zimbabwe needed to create stable democratic
conditions to access the funding. But Mugabe remains an albatross to the
country's economic progress, with the economy stagnating as he pursues his
policies of confrontation.

He said until there was real evidence of change, the EU's restrictive
measures - aimed specifically against Mugabe and his inner circle and not
bearing in any way on the wider Zimbabwean population – “must remain in
place and be better explained."


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Buy Zimbabwe Day: public invited to celebrate local goods

http://www.thezimbabwean.co.uk

Next Wednesday Africa Unity Square will see the colourful launch of the Buy
Zimbabwe Campaign. All are encouraged to join in the celebrations, aimed at
raising awareness and generating support for consumers to buy locally-made
products and help revive local industries.
11.07.1104:28pm
Novell Zwange

In order for the campaign to be successful and effective, it needs to go
beyond words by working with business, government and consumers in practical
matters directed at ensuring increased production and consumption of local
goods and services, says the campaign’s spokesperson Munyaradzi Hwengwere.

"Buy Zimbabwe goes beyond simply assertion of pride in what one produces but
importantly assures the entire family of a prosperous and sustainable
future. It guarantees employment and higher standards of living,” he said.

Participation of the Standards Association was particularly important, he
added, because the campaign was designed to celebrate those brands that make
Zimbabwe proud, the brands that meet high quality standards, adhere to the
country’s labour laws and are produced in Zimbabwe - the three key
principles which Buy Zimbabwe stands for.

“The current trend which has seen a lot of industries being closed and jobs
lost is disturbing and cannot be left to go on. We all rely on these jobs,
our children rely on these jobs the entire economy relies on these jobs," he
said.

Scores of Chief Executive Officers and Zimbabwe’s leading business
executives will be there to mingle with their consumers.

The major concern that local businessmen share is the sustainability of
their businesses, considering the inconsistent policy environment that they
are currently operating under.

Hwengwere said that although the campaign appreciated the relevance of the
duty free regime on finished basic commodities introduced by the government
at a time of severe shortages, close examination of the current policy on
duty reveals that it is largely skewed towards foreign products and
threatens the survival of local companies.


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Marginalization of Matebeleland discussed

http://www.thezimbabwean.co.uk

Bulawayo Progressive Residents Association (BPRA) held a public meeting that
was attended by 150 residents from Nketa 9 at Mgiqika Primary School from
2pm to 5pm. The meeting served to offer residents from ward 25 an
opportunity to discuss service delivery issues affecting them.
13.07.1111:47am
Bulawayo Progressive Residents Association

Amongst the issues raised at the meeting was the continued marginalisation
of the people of Matabeleland, arguing that people from the region are not
given equal opportunities to people in other regions in Zimbabwe. They said
due to this, people from the region had fewer job opportunities due to
nepotism with mostly people from Mashonaland getting jobs as most companies
are owned by outsiders.

In the same vein, they cited that children from Matabeleland had difficulty
obtaining scholarships, with mostly children from Harare and other areas of
Mashonaland getting them. They also alleged that even in Zimbabwean
universities, including NUST and Lupane University which are located in
Bulawayo, children from Bulawayo and Matebeland were few with most students
coming from Mashonaland.

Residents of Nketa also accused the city council of selectively
disconnecting water for residents with outstanding bills. They said there
was corruption at the city council with those tasked with disconnecting
supplies for defaulting residents receiving bribes in exchange for not
disconnecting water supplies.

The residents called for the city council to stop corruption within its
ranks and ensure that residents are treated equally. Residents also
complained of poor refuse collection.

They noted that even when BCC refuse collection trucks come into the area,
the council workers do not collect all refuse, but select some items and
leave others. This leaves residents with no choice but to create illegal
dump sites in the streets, bushes and in trenches.


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Govt needs help to revive Byo: Biti

http://www.thezimbabwean.co.uk/

Government cannot revive industry in Bulawayo without the help of
stakeholders, Finance Minister Tendai Biti said.
11.07.1104:12pm
Paul Ndlovu

He said the task needed a holistic approach in the problems being faced by
the country’s second largest city.

“The economy went through almost 12 years of devaluation, industries were
deserting the country en-mass and inflation reached its worst levels,” he
said.

“Industries all around the country found it very hard to operate. However,
now that we are slowly reviving our economy it is now critical for all
stakeholders to come together in this revival scheme.”

A cabinet task force, led by Minister of Industry and Commerce, Welshman
Ncube, had been established to resuscitate industry in Bulawayo.

“We have in the past given Bulawayo a lot of money, in the 2011 budget we
gave local authorities $32 million to be divided among them,’’ he said.

“I understand that for some reason best known to them some of that money is
still yet to be used but what I should emphasise is that we will continue
funding all projects targeted at the overall development of the Matabeleland
region.’’

Biti said the Finance Ministry was committed to reviving the region, and
would continue to provide funds for essential projects

in the Matabeleland region as a whole. We know that the major priority

are the water projects, these being the Mtshabezi – Mzingwane pipeline

link project and the construction of the Gwayi Shangani Dam,” he said,
adding that his Ministry was also focusing on resuscitating lines of

credit for businesses in the region.

The minister will tour major projects in the Matabeleland region this week.

“During the tour I will visit projects such as Lupane State University

and the Mtshabezi project the idea is to get a full appreciation of

those projects and to identify loopholes that need our urgent

attention,” said Biti.

It was recently reported that the city lost more than 20 000 jobs

after the closing down of 87 companies last year.

The ministerial task force includes Minister Biti, Professor Ncube,

Agricultural Mechanisation and Irrigation Minister Dr Joseph Made,

Labour and Social Welfare Minister Paurina Mupariwa, Economic Planning

and Investment Promotion Minister Tapiwa Mashakada and Youth,

Indigenisation and Empowerment Minister Saviour Kasukuwere.


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No toilets, running water for 7 years in Cowdray Park

http://www.thezimbabwean.co.uk

Residents of Bulawayo’s Cowdray Park suburb who acquired houses under the
Zimbabwe Government Employees Union (ZIGEU) housing scheme have not have
toilets and running water for the past seven years.
11.07.1103:58pm
Zwanai Sithole Harare

This development has sparked outrage as residents feel they have been
cheated by the housing scheme developers and fear the situation could lead
to an outbreak of water borne diseases such as cholera.

The houses were built by Hawkflight construction and ZIGEU.

Residents who spoke to The Zimbabwean news crew last week bitterly
complained about lack of proper toilets and running water at the site.

“Since 2004 when we were allocated these stands we have been using Blair
toilets. To make matters worse we do not have water and we depend on wells
which we have dug. The situation is pathetic,” said Lameck Ncube, a
resident.

Most of the residents have now resorted to use the bush to relieve
themselves as they do not have the Blair toilets.

“As you can see this area is sandy and it is very difficult to build Blair
toilets. Most of the Blair toilets here have collapsed especially during the
rainy season .Most of us here are using the bush,” said another resident
Garikai Manyara.

The residents also complained about poor accessibility as the roads are not
properly graded.

An official of Hawkflight Construction, Sikhulumeli Kole, said the problems
facing the residents had nothing to do with his organisation.

“As far as my organisation is concerned, we have done our best to serve our
clients and every piece of infrastructure is in place,” he said.

The Mayor of Bulawayo, Thaba Moyo,s could not be reached for comment.


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Sekeramayi “behind Mutinhiri farm invasion”

http://www.thezimbabwean.co.uk

Hundreds of armed “war veterans” and party militia invaded Tracy Mutinhiri’s
Waltendall Farm on Saturday, allegedly at the behest of Zanu (PF) Minister
of State Security and Senator Marondera-Wedza, Sydney Sekeramayi.
13.07.1112:12pm
Jane Makoni

Once a close family friend, Sekeremayi has also been accused of engineering
Muthinhiri’s divorce from her husband Ambrose.

“It is an open secret in Zanu (PF) circles that Sekeramayi was instrumental
in the unfortunate split of the Mutinhiri family. We are not surprised to
learn that his hand is behind the attempted invasion of Tracy’s farm. He
hates her personally - this has nothing to do with politics,” said a top
Zanu (PF) insider.

More than 1 000 militia drawn from across the province and led by a
self-styled war veteran who identified himself as Chizema, descended on the
farm armed with an assortment of traditional weapons such as axes, spears
and catapults.

“We have been sent by honourable, Sekeramayi, to kill the rebellious
Mutinhiri and farm workers sympathetic to her. We would also set on fire
harvested farm produce such as tobacco, maize crop and confiscate beasts at
the farm. Mutinhiri is no longer Zanu (PF). If she wants a farm she would be
allocated one by her newlyfound ally, MDC,” Chizema told The Zimbabwean at
the farm, 10 kilometres out of Marondera.

Mutinhiri’s personal police guards stationed at the farm and riot police
from Marondera drove the thugs away.

The attempted farm seizure comes barely a week after Mutinhiri unmasked CIO
operatives at Dhirihori School who allegedly wanted to eliminate her.
Recently, Mutinhiri escaped a CIO attempt to spray her eyes with a blinding
substance.

“We will stop at nothing in our bid to destroy Mutinhiri’s political career.
She violated Zanu (PF) code of conduct by her non partisan politics through
the Constituency Development Fund (CDF) projects which benefited families
from across the political divide in Chief Svosve area. Sekeramayi was not
happy to see MDC benefiting from the income generating projects,” said one
of the militia leaders who did not realise was talking to a reporter.

Zanu (PF) insiders said Sekeramayi was disturbed by the popularity gained by
Mutinhiri.

“She has suddenly become so popular that she would easily retain the
Parliamentary Seat even if she decided to stand as an independent candidate
in the coming elections. Sekeramayi preferred party provincial security
officer, Lawrence Katsiru, for the constituency legislative candidature”,
said a Zanu (PF) insider.

Ambrose Mutinhiri, a former ZNA brigadier, is Zanu (PF) Member of Parliament
for Marondera West.


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Zimbabwe music star becomes UN goodwill ambassador


Jul 13, 11:29 AM EDT

By GILLIAN GOTORA
Associated Press

NORTON, Zimbabwe (AP) -- Zimbabwean music superstar Oliver Mtukudzi's lyrics
have delved into child abuse and homeless youngsters living on the streets.
Now he's been chosen to serve as a goodwill ambassador for the U.N.
children's agency.

Mtukudzi says he'll do all he can to protect the vulnerable and help promote
HIV prevention.

"My passion for music comes from children. I have always dealt with children
during my career," said Mtukudzi, who was chosen last month for the post.

Tuku, as Mtukudzi is known to fans worldwide, is Zimbabwe's first U.N.
ambassador. Other U.N. children's ambassadors include Susan Sarandon, Mia
Farrow, Danny Glover, Whoopi Goldberg, Harry Belafonte, Jackie Chan and
David Beckham.

"The honor is not for me alone but for the country," Mtukudzi, 59, told The
Associated Press at the arts center he built in the town of Norton, 25 miles
(40 kilometers) west of Harare.

Oliver Mtukudzi began performing in 1977 and has released more than 40
albums and compilations of his hits in local languages and English since
then. He has successfully toured Britain, Germany, other European nations,
Canada and the United States as well as topping the bill at concerts across
Africa.

His songs have been described by critics as a moral voice, tackling
everything from discrimination to alcohol abuse.

The song "Todii?" (What can we do?) refers in the local Shona language to
the problem of HIV-infected adults raping children in their care, and asks
the listener to imagine the pain if their own child was abused that way.

"Some songs are reminders of where we are going wrong. The purpose of a song
is to give life and hope to people," he said.

Apart from being a singer and songwriter, Mtukudzi writes and directs films.
One of his musical productions, "Was My Child," highlights the lives of
Zimbabwe's street children.

Studies show that Zimbabwe has a growing number of street children, the
result of years of political and economic turmoil, and they are often
exposed to sexual exploitation in exchange for food, money and clothing.

"It is every parent's responsibility to keep children out of the streets,"
Mtukudzi said.

His songs have criticized political violence in his homeland and one hit,
"Wasakara" (You are getting old), was seen as urging longtime authoritarian
ruler President Robert Mugabe, now 87, to retire.

In 2007, he opened an arts center in Norton, to help young people pursue
their dreams of becoming artists. Youngsters come to the center to try their
hand in sculpture, art and music.

The Zimbabwean superstar tragically lost one of his five children in a car
crash last year. Sam Mtukudzi, 21, was also a musician.

Tuku said parents often need to be encouraged to support the artistic
aspirations of their children.

"Parents have the wrong attitudes toward their children being artists ...
God gave these kids talent for a reason, to heal and give hope," he said.


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Training for Zimbabwe’s new tobacco growers

http://tobaccoreporter.com/

Jul 13, 2011—Zimbabwe’s Open University (ZOU) and Progressive Tobacco
Farmers Union have signed an agreement that will see them co-operate in
providing education and training in tobacco growing for resettled farmers,
according to a Tobacco China Online story.

Speaking at the signing ceremony recently, ZOU vice chancellor, Dr. Primrose
Kurasha, said the land reform program had ushered in a new breed of tobacco
farmers, most of whom had been operating previously as subsistence farmers.

Kurasha said it was ZOU's belief that education using indigenous languages
would unlock potential for development among new farmers.

The training they would receive would give them the skills they needed.


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4 tons per ha – from land dry enough to smelt iron

http://www.thezimbabwean.co.uk
 
 

The soil on which Pastor Leephat Chinyange farms is beautiful soil – red clay, hard – in fact hard enough to smelt iron and to make the beautiful clay pots one sees for sale along the sides of the Masvingo-Beitbridge road.

 

Pastor Chinyanga and those who practise Foundations for Farming believe the biblical promise: Isaiah 35:6 - For waters shall burst forth in the wilderness, and streams in the desert. 
Pastor Chinyanga and those who practise Foundations for Farming believe the biblical promise: Isaiah 35:6 - For waters shall burst forth in the wilderness, and streams in the desert.

Its beautiful soil indeed, but not for farming – in fact the area is traditionally considered ranching land, common wisdom holds that very little will grow there. Being region 5, it is Zimbabwe’s driest area, receiving very little rainfall annually.

But this past season in this vast and dry land, there was a beautiful patch of lush green maize, standing defiantly against both common wisdom and the elements. This was the work of a man who believes in the God of the impossible.

And what was achieved is hard to comprehend – Pastor Chimombe has farmed here before, and from this very patch he has failed to get even one bucket of maize in past seasons. In fact two years ago he even hired a tractor hoping mechanisation would improve his yield. But he got nothing. This year he got 300 buckets (about 50 bags) from his tiny piece of land.

So how did all this happen? In 2009 he heard about Foundations for Farming through a meeting of Evangelical Fellowship for Zimbabwe farmers. He is an office bearer for the organisation in his province.

But it was too late in the season to apply what he heard. So in 2010 he started early. At the time, the ground was so hard the hoe was bouncing off as he dug the well-spaced holes where the seed would go in. He is laughing as he tells me this, as if to say only a mad man would do this!

But by faith all things are possible, and dig he did, lining up the holes with precision. High standards matter here. The principles of Foundations for Farming include:

do things on time, to the highest standard you can, minimise wastage, and do it all with joy, for the joy of the Lord is our strength.

Picture of prep to high standards here

Next he put in the mulch – the area being so dry, it took considerable effort and cost to obtain the mulch, but herein lies the secret.

The rain was late – rainfall in Zimbabwe should start around late October/early November, but that year rain fell for the first time on December 5. He planted on December 7, and the crop that grew was a lush, beautiful healthy green crop with on average four cobs per stalk. This was phenomenal – no-one in the neighbourhood had seen anything quite like this in so dry an area, people were asking him if he watered his maize by night!

Following the rainfall on December 5, the rains disappeared for pretty much the rest of that season. Like any farmer who has scanned the heavens for rains, each week he would calculate that if the rains came now, I would have maybe three of the four cobs per stalk, then two, then even the one still standing was starting to look doubtful.

And still there was no rain. What was happening though was that the dew that comes in the early hours was retained by the mulch, and this was sufficient to keep the crop growing (remember before the times of Noah it never used to rain – maybe this is how God watered the earth?)

The long and the short of it is that from land dry enough to smelt iron, this man of God obtained yields of two tons per hectare. The country average in areas with good rain is less than 1t/ha, and in fact his own neighbours got absolutely nothing, and many will need food aid again this year. If the rains had come on time, and more than just that one time, he would probably have got between 6-8t/ha.

He donated part of his bumper crop to the local remand prison.

This is another principle of the programme – giving. Give and it will come back to you, a good measure pressed down shaken together and running over will be poured in your lap. For with the measure you use, it will be measured to you. - Luke 6:38

Pastor Chimombe explained that mulching is giving food to the soil so that it gives back – we can’t just take away from the soil year after year and still expect a good yield. God ordained that the soil will be fed organic matter, hence the importance of mulch. This is not to say it is not possible to feed it other things like artificial fertiliser, but while this too is food, it’s a bit like the difference between eating organic food and living on McDonalds!

Giving to receive - not as sometimes preached in the prosperity gospel, but as taught by a God who gave his son is the fundamental key to reversing the cycle of poverty. This is only possible through a changed heart following true repentance and an acknowledgement that a true and saving faith in God shows itself in actions of faithfulness. It is active faith that makes Chimombe and thousands of others around Zimbabwe apply the principles of ‘farming God’s way’ to a ground dry enough to make clay pots. And it is the mercy of God that his effort brings forth an oasis of green in a sea of scorched brown earth.

Foundations for Farming founder, Brian Oldrieve will be in Leeds on the 27th of August 2011, if you are UK based, you are most welcome to come and hear him speak about this programme. Please get in touch on info@theglobalnative.org.uk

 


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Why is Zimbabwe's national airline called Scare Zimbabwe?

http://www.globalpost.com/

Zimbabwe's state-owned airline used to be efficient and profitable. No
longer.
Zimbabwe GlobalPost CorrespondentJuly 13, 2011 06:50

HARARE, Zimbabwe — Passengers wanting to travel by Air Zimbabwe from the
capital Harare to the country’s second city, Bulawayo, have found themselves
transported by bus. The journey that usually takes 45 minutes by air can
take up to five hours by road.

It is testimony to the perilous condition of Zimbabwe's national flag
carrier that passengers are being bumped off scheduled flights and put
aboard a bus for the 275-mile journey to Bulawayo. Business people are
fuming that it is impossible to arrange meetings when there is no prospect
of arriving on time.

”By the time we get there, it’s time to come back,” one prominent Bulawayo
businessman said. Air Zimbabwe used to run a profitable commuter route so
that business people could fly from one city to the other in the morning and
return in the evening. No longer.

Air Zimbabwe has been on the ropes for much of this year, hit first by a
pilots’ strike and then by fuel shortages.

But the airline’s problems have a deeper malaise. They are emblematic of a
state-owned company that has, over a 30-year period, been the plaything of
politicians. The first post-independence minister of transport, Herbert
Ushewokunze, personally designed the airline’s livery. And his successors
routinely give instructions to general managers over the phone.

Most damaging of all, President Robert Mugabe diverts scheduled flights to
use planes for his frequent trips overseas, causing considerable
inconvenience to passengers.

An editor and two journalists were locked up in 2004 for daring to report
that Mugabe had commandeered a plane to take him on a trip to the Far East.
His minister of information objected to the word “commandeered.” Mugabe has
been to Singapore four times this year, mostly for health reasons, flying
Air Zimbabwe.

Bad business decisions have added to the airline's woes. Routes to China
have been introduced while the busy and lucrative London route has been
starved of flights.

Air Zimbabwe has two Boeing 767-200s used on the China and London routes and
two Boeing 737s used on the Johannesburg route. Three Chinese planes sit
forlornly on the tarmac at Harare airport. Because they are so often out of
service, they are universally known by Zimbabweans as “Zhing Zhongs,” the
derisive term Zimbabweans use for cheap imported Chinese goods that don’t
last very long. A third plane of the same model is cannibalized for parts.
The Chinese planes are the product of a political deal with Beijing.

The Chinese planes' record of breakdowns have prompted wags to call the
airline "Scare Zimbabwe." So far, however, the airline has not had any
serious crashes.

It was not always like this. At Zimbabwe's independence in 1980 Air Zimbabwe
had more than 15 planes. Its regional network was unambitious but
profitable.

Today the airline wallows in a debt of $100 million.

Board chair Jonathan Kadzura defended the decision to bus passengers from
Harare to Bulawayo saying each flight must have enough passengers to make
the trip profitable.

“There is no way I can authorize the 767-200 from Harare to Bulawayo with
only 30 passengers,” said Kadzura. “I am not like a stupid bus operator. Who
can authorize a bus to drive from Mutare (Zimbabwe’s eastern city) to Harare
with one passenger?”

But Kadzura did authorize a flight to Johannesburg with only 13 passengers
on board last month. Despite the decision to only allow the Harare to
Bulawayo fight to fly if it has enough passengers, there are international
routes that are flown for political reasons without adequate traffic. The
airline once flew a single passenger from Dubai to Harare.

When not diverting passengers to bus routes, Kadzura pens puff pieces in the
government media praising Mugabe and the president's ruling Zanu-PF party.

Aviation observers unfavorably compare Air Zimbabwe to Kenya Airways. The
Kenyan airline is a success story largely because it works in partnership
with KLM. Today Kenya Airways is the busiest and most profitable African
airline with Nairobi as its hub. Its planes fly to West Africa, Europe,
America and the Far East.

“The Air Zimbabwe story fully explains how this country has been run down by
greedy and selfish individuals,” a local paper, the Daily News, said
recently.

It is a view shared by the nation at large. There is a growing demand that
costly and badly managed state corporations should be privatized quickly.

But Mugabe’s regime argues that “strategic” companies like Air Zimbabwe need
to be kept out of the hands of Western owners. But it is the Zimbabwean
taxpayer who must pick up the tab if Robert Mugabe decides to make a fifth
journey to the Far East later this year.


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Travelling through Zimbabwe

http://www.economist.com
 
The road to Bulawayo

Jul 13th 2011, 13:57 by D.G. | BULAWAYO AND HARARE

IT IS a glorious typical mid-winter's day in Harare, Zimbabwe's capital. The sky is a deep blue, the sun hot, the majestic jacarandas that line the streets preparing to shed their feathery emerald green leaves before bursting into deep lilac-blue in early spring. The all-too-obvious Central Office of Intelligence (CIO) man, sitting in a car outside my guest house for the past two days, pretending to read a newspaper, has mercifully gone by the time Eddie comes to pick me up. The CIO spooks, controlled by president Robert Mugabe's Zanu-PF, are all over the place, just like the Stasi in the former communist East Germany. Most people have given up caring.

Eddie is Eddie Cross, a founding member of Morgan Tsvangirai's Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), and one of just three white MPs in Zimbabwe's 210-member parliament. We are to drive the 366 kms (227 miles) to his constituency in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe's second-biggest city, once a prosperous industrial hub, now in decline. Bulawayo is also the capital of Matabeleland, home to the Ndebele people, a branch of the Zulus. In the 1820s they broke away from their king, Shaka, founder of the Zulu nation, moving north into what is now the south-west corner of Zimbabwe after conquering the local Shona people, still the dominant ethnic group in the country as a whole.

The rivalry between the two groups remains to this day. Mr Mugabe and most of his Zanu-PF party are Shona, while the MDC gets much of its support from the Ndebele and related Kalanga. Mr Tsvangirai and many of his top aides are actually Shona who provide the majority of his support. But the (minority) Ndebele/Kalaga are even more solidly behind the MDC. During the war of independence against Ian Smith's regime in the 1970s, Ndebele and Shona fought on the same side though Zanu and Zapu were invariably at loggerheads. But any camaraderie that developed at that time was smashed by Mr Mugabe's Gukurahundi ethnic-cleansing campaign against the Ndebele in Matabeleland following independence in 1980. Anything between 7,000 and 20,000 Ndebele were slaughtered.

Born and bred in Bulawayo, Eddie, an agricultural economist by training now well into his 70s, knows the route to Bulawayo like the back of his hand. In normal times, the journey might have been expected to take around three hours. But in the present dilapidated state of what is supposed to be the main artery between Mozambique in the north and Botswana in the south-west, it can take up to double that, especially when the police are feeling particularly impecunious. On one trip, Eddie counted no fewer than 18 road blocks manned by police demanding money on one pretext or another. Most drivers pay up without a murmur, using the increasingly filthy American dollar bills that, along with the less-used South African rand, are now the country's only legal tender following the abandonment of Zimbabwe's own worthless currency in January 2009.

The road takes us through what used to be some of the best farming land in the country, now an endless wasteland of tall dried-blonde grasses, thorn trees, broken fences and crumbling farm buildings—no animals, no villages, no people—following Mr Mugabe’s land grabs. "See those tobacco sheds," Eddie says, "that's where one farmer was bludgeoned to death by Mugabe's thugs." Of around 6,000 mostly white-owned commercial farms in 2000—three-quarters of them bought on the open market after independence with a certificate declaring the government had no interest in them—less than 300 remain. Some of the land was allocated to poor landless blacks. But the biggest and best farms were handed out to generals, judges, ministers, senior civil servants and other Zanu-PF bigwigs, along with Mr Mugabe's own family and friends, most of whom have little interest in farming. Eddie reckons that at least half the seized farms now lie derelict.

Now and then, a well-tended dairy farm with neat fencing and fire-breaks comes into view. All are white-owned. So why have they been spared? Probably because the owners are in cahoots with Mr Mugabe. One such is Nicholas van Hoogstraten, a British property tycoon, accused of hiring hitmen to murder a business rival in London in 1999, but cleared on appeal. Now a member of Zanu-PF, he owns (amongst other properties in Zimbabwe) a 500,000-hectare game farm, once one of the most famous cattle ranches in the country. We drive past for mile after mile of it along our route. He is said to be close to Zimbabwe's president and to contribute handsomely to party funds.

Just before Mr van Hoogstraten’s estate, Eddie points to a newly tarred patch on a straight stretch of road. "That's where Morgan had his accident," he says, referring to the crash in March 2009, barely a month after Mr Tsvangirai's appointment as prime minister in the new power-sharing government, when his wife, Susan, was killed and he was seriously injured after his car was forced off the road by an oncoming lorry. Like most MDC supporters, Eddie still believes it was an assassination attempt. Fears for the popular MDC leader's life remain. Just last month, the security chiefs repeated their refusal ever to serve under him, saying that they were ready to "do anything" to ensure Mr Mugabe remained in power.

Zimbabwe is now the second poorest in the world (after Congo) with a GDP per person last year of just $365. Yet its potential wealth is vast. We are soon crossing the Great Dyke, a mineral-rich band running from north to south, 550km long and 11km wide, that contains some of the world's richest deposits of platinum, gold, silver, chromium, nickel and asbestos. But much-needed foreign investors are being scared away by the political instability, violence and new "indigenisation" law. Under this law foreign companies must "cede" 51% of their equity to "indigenous" (meaning black) Zimbabweans.

Outside Gweru, another once-bustling industrial town, the grim watchtowers of Wha Wha prison come into view. This was where Mr Mugabe languished from 1964 to 1974, having been convicted by the Smith government for "subversive speech". While there, he earned three of his seven degrees, with the help of a white Dominican nun. A lecturer in anthropology, for six years she used to smuggle out messages from him to Zanu members in Dar es Salaam, then capital of Tanzania. A little further on is Zimbabwe's main military airbase, where pilots used to train for the Battle of Britain. "They’ve only got about three planes left," Eddie mutters. And then, as we reach Bulawayo, Milton High School appears, where Dutch-born Hendrik Verwoerd, one of apartheid’s chief architects, went to school during the first world war before returning to South Africa.

So much history, so much potential, so much waste.

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