The ZIMBABWE Situation
An extensive and up-to-date website containing news, views and links related to ZIMBABWE - a country in crisis
Return to INDEX page
Please note: You need to have 'Active content' enabled in your IE browser in order to see the index of articles on this webpage

ZUJ condemns journalists’ harassment

http://www.thestandard.co.zw/

Saturday, 23 July 2011 18:10

By Our Staff

Civic society and media journalists yesterday condemned the harassment of
journalists at parliament yesterday, where a Zanu PF mob disrupted a public
hearing on the Human Rights Commission Bill.

Secretary-general of the Zimbabwe Union of Journalists (ZUJ), Foster Dongozi
said the union strongly condemned the violence and called upon the
government to ensure the safety of media workers.

“We call upon the inclusive government and the parties to rein in on their
wayward supporters and advise them not to abuse and harass journalists,”  he
said.

Dongozi said they had tried to engage the principals in the inclusive
government and the harassment of journalists yesterday was a sign that
either they were not listening or they were not taking advice.

He said the Federation of African Journalists had engaged with heads of
state across the continent and both President Mugabe and Prime Minister
Morgan Tsvangirai agreed that journalists should not be abused.

The Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR) also condemned the attacks,
calling on parliament to investigate and deal with the alleged assaults.

“ZLHR unreservedly condemns the conduct of the rowdy mob, the disruptions of
the public hearing not only in Harare, but also in Chinhoyi and Mutare, and
the assaults on a legislator and journalists.

“These disruptions, which constitute contempt of Parliament in terms of the
law, are criminal offences,” the lawyers said in a statement.


Click here or ALT-T to return to TOP

God, not Internet, holds key to Malawi protests

http://www.thestandard.co.zw/

Saturday, 23 July 2011 18:01

By Ed Cropley

LILONGWE (Reuters) - Unlike the Internet-based popular protests that have
swept North Africa and the Middle East, the biggest threat to embattled
Malawian President Bingu wa Mutharika may be from Christian churches.

With two-thirds of the impoverished southern African nation's 13 million
people living in villages and only now having basic mobile phones, let alone
Internet-enabled ones, the power of technology to mobilise mass opposition
is limited.

However, in the former British colony where more than 80 percent of the
population is Christian, the words of the church carry enormous weight -- 
and the death of 18 anti-government protesters in clashes with police this
week has spurred the institution into action.

In a statement, the head of the Catholic church, Bishop Joseph Zuza,
lamented the loss of life and called on Mutharika to "listen attentively and
honestly to the cry of Malawians".

Protest organisers have given Mutharika until August 16 to sit down to
discuss their grievances, in particular the chronic lack of foreign exchange
and fuel that is making official projections of 6.6 economic growth this
year look fanciful.

The self-styled "Economist-in-Chief", first elected in 2004, has shown no
sign of bowing to the demands, but history suggests the moral authority of
the church, and its ability to sway rural voters ahead of a 2014 election,
may cause him to relent.

The clergy played a crucial role in the early 1990s in the downfall of
Hastings Banda, the UK-trained medical doctor who ruled Malawi with an iron
fist for its first three decades after independence in 1964.

"When the people are being afflicted, the church needs to come out," Father
Symon Matumbo, pastor of St. Peter's Church in Lilongwe, told Reuters after
Saturday morning mass.

"We should not wait for things to come to the worst. The government needs to
listen to the voice of the people, understand the issues over foreign
exchange and fuel."

AFRICA'S NERO?

In the cities, where cars queue round the block for scare fuel, Mutharika's
reputation has taken a major knock.

As well as open expressions of dissent on the streets, Malawi's private
media are in full cry, reflecting the police beating dished out to six
journalists during this week's crackdown, and the temporary closure of
several radio stations.

"This government has simply lost it," Nation newspaper columnist George
Kasakula wrote in a scathing editorial that compared Mutharika to the Roman
emperor Nero, who, according to legend, merrily played the violin while his
capital burned.

"As hundreds of Malawians took to the streets -… he decided to give us a
public lecture," Kasakula wrote.

"If that was his way of solving the problems Malawians have been living with
for the past several months, it was way off the mark."

Emboldened by this week's bloodshed, young men talk freely of their desire
to "fight for democracy", but even in the capital it is clear Malawi is far
from fertile ground for a sub-Saharan Facebook revolution.

"Most people come here just to use Skype to chat to their friends outside
the country," said Shafqat Kathia, a Pakistani Internet cafe owner.

"Phone calls are just too expensive."


Click here or ALT-T to return to TOP

Town clerk refuses suspension

http://www.thestandard.co.zw/

Saturday, 23 July 2011 17:57

BY NUNURAYI JENA

CHINHOYI — Town clerk Ezekiel Muringani has refused to be suspended by
council for alleged fraud after he received support from Local Government,
Rural and Urban Development minister Ignatius Chombo.
The standoff has sparked another clash between Chombo and his deputy Sessel
Zvidzai who are defending different camps.

Zvidzai is backing mayor Claudius Nyamhondoro who suspended Muringani for
allegedly stealing an unspecified amount of money from council.

Nyamhondoro told The Standard that the underfire council chief would not be
allowed to report for work tomorrow.

He said he had written the suspension letter last week but Muringani had
refused to accept it.

“Muringani is refusing the letter of suspension because he is aware of the
letter’s contents as I told him sometime last month before he went on
 leave,” Nyamhondoro said.

Nyamhondoro copied the letter to Chombo and  the Chinhoyi district
administrator, a W Tembo.

Chombo responded in writing saying a committee had been set up to help
Chinhoyi get back on its knees once again.

But Zvidzai shot back saying the appointment of the team that is set to
start work tomorrow was a clear sign that “the administration’s leg is weak”.

Zvidzai added that the town clerk “should just pack his bags and go home and
not to jump from one office to another trying to cling to the post”.

Nyamhondoro said Muringani seems to be getting backing from Chombo after a
woman who claimed to be the clerk’s wife told him over the phone that they
would not succeed because the minister was on their side.

Muringani also vowed that he would not throw in the towel claiming that he
was a fighter.

The suspension follows recommendations by the audit team which recommended
that Muringani be investigated together with the Finance Director William
Mandinde who has since been fired, as well as  council secretary Abel
Gotora.

The trio is being accused of defrauding the council of some thousands of
dollars.

According to the audit report, Muringani took US$4 150 from the main
collection points without signing for it.

It is further alleged that despite  the fact that he was on full medical aid
he claimed a sum of US$12 535 in hospital fees.

Last year, Muringani was suspended only for Chombo to intervene and
reinstate him against the wishes of Chinhoyi residents.


Click here or ALT-T to return to TOP

Zanu PF youths haunt ex-Zipra fighter

http://www.thestandard.co.zw/

Saturday, 23 July 2011 17:56

BY NQOBANI NDLOVU

BULAWAYO — Zanu PF militants are allegedly trying to evict the chairperson
of an organisation representing Zipra ex-fighters from his ranch in
Matabeleland North province saying he must go back to Mashonaland.
Retired Colonel Baster Magwizi, the Zipra Veterans Trust chairperson on
Friday said the threats to chase him away from Sothani Ranch in Gwayi were
revenge for the trust’s role in stopping the exhumation of bodies in Mt
Darwin Zanu PF claims were of people killed during the liberation war.

The Zipra ex-fighters obtained a High Court interdict ordering the Zanu PF
aligned war veterans to stop the exhumations until government put in place
systems to identify the victims.

“It’s both tribal and political,” Magwizi said.

“The Zanu PF people are telling the villagers here that they should evict me
and they would be assisted by Zanu PF because I took their land.
“It is said that I should go back to Mashonaland and leave the land to
Matabeleland people.

“Attempts to evict me started after our trust stopped Zanu PF from exhuming
bodies in Mt Darwin.”

Ex- Zipra fighters said they suspected that some of the bodies at the
Chibondo mineshaft could be of their fellow comrades killed during clashes
with Zanla combatants after Independence.

Magwizi claimed there were also attempts to frame him after a report was
made to the police that he had stolen scrap metal from a neighbouring
white-owned farm.

But he vowed to fight legally to maintain control of his farm, which he said
was his only source of livelihood.

Chaotic land evictions, mainly on political grounds, continue across the
country despite calls for farm disturbances to end.

Deputy Labour and Social Services minister Tracy Mutinhiri is also fighting
for control of her Marondera farm after land invaders allegedly sent by her
political rival tried to take over the property.


Click here or ALT-T to return to TOP

Malawi appoints new army chief

http://www.thestandard.co.zw/

Saturday, 23 July 2011 17:55

BLANTYRE — Malawi’s President Bingu wa Mutharika has appointed a new army
chief two days after a deadly crackdown on anti-government protesters,
raising speculation about the loyalty of the impoverished southern African
nation’s military.
In an announcement on state radio late on Friday, Mutharika promoted Henry
Odillo, a junior officer, to replace Marko Chiziko, whose contract had
officially expired last year but whose departure was nonetheless unexpected.

Although Odillo had been in the frame as a possible successor, the timing —
two days after 18 people were killed in a crackdown on political riots — is
likely to fuel speculation about simmering anti-Mutharika feelings in the
military.

Calm has returned after last  week’s demonstrations demanding the
resignation of Mutharika, a former World Bank economist first elected in
2004, but protest organisers have set an August 16 deadline for him to sit
down and listen to their grievances.

The mood on both sides is uncompromising, suggesting further confrontation
is likely in a country of 13 million people that bills itself as the
peace-loving “Warm Heart of Africa”.

At a police graduation ceremony on Friday, Mutharika struck a combative
note, saying he would “smoke out” protesters if they returned to the
streets.
Ordinary Malawians, frustrated by a chronic lack of foreign exchange and
fuel that they say belies the economy’s stellar growth statistics, are not
heeding the threats.

“The protests this week gave them a lesson,” said William Sanudi, a
37-year-old curio-seller in the capital, Lilongwe.

“August 17 — people are waiting for that day. They will go back on the
streets and things will get worse. People want to fight for truth and
democracy.”

Condemnation from Washington and Europe over this week’s crackdown suggests
the aid squeeze — and thereby Malawi’s overall economic plight — could well
intensify.

The US Millennium Challenge Corporation, which approved a US$350 million
overhaul of the decrepit national power grid early this year, said it was
“deeply concerned” at the crackdown and would be reviewing its operations.

— Reuters


Click here or ALT-T to return to TOP

Wanton salary hike sparks fresh GNU crisis

http://www.thestandard.co.zw/

Saturday, 23 July 2011 17:50

BY NQABA MATSHAZI

The tottering inclusive government is headed for a fresh crisis following
the unprecedented move by the Zimbabwe Mining Development Corporation to
deposit US$40 million into the civil service salaries account towards a pay
hike repeatedly promised by President Robert Mugabe in recent months.

While at the birth of the inclusive government, Zanu PF accused MDC-T of
running a parallel government, analysts say the former liberation movement
seems to be doing exactly that by running a parallel structure to rival the
operations of the Finance ministry.

Many were surprised last week, including Finance minister Tendai Biti, by
revelations that the money to increase civil servants’ salaries came
directly from the Zimbabwe Mining Development Corporation (ZMDC) and not
through the normal established channels of his ministry.

The Ministry of Finance reportedly deposited the usual US$120 million for
normal remuneration of civil servants, with the ZMDC setting an unusual
precedent by adding US$40 million to cover the promised salary increase.

Finance minister, Tendai Biti had previously stated that the government did
not have money to fund a wage increase, but Zanu PF demanded that a salary
review be effected.

This, analysts said, was highly irregular and questioned the motive of a
parastatal paying salaries of the civil service.

“This is not standard procedure,” John Robertson, an economist said. “It is
very irregular and it might not work.”

The renowned economist said in normal circumstances, the government should
pay salaries through tax receipts, with the Finance ministry being
accountable for these adding that the new arrangement created complications
for the future.

Robertson said as it is, there was a wrangle over the sale of Marange
diamonds and questioned what would happen in the event that Zimbabwe was
barred from selling its diamonds by the Kimberly Process Certification
Scheme (KPCS).

Robertson said, because of this contestation, it was highly unlikely that
the ZMDC would be able to sustain subsidising civil servants’ salaries.
Former Finance minister, Simba  Makoni described the intervention of the
ZMDC as a rather curious arrangement, also questioning whether this was
sustainable.

“It’s an abnormal payment,” he remarked. “It raises more questions than
answers.”

Makoni, who now leads Mavambo/Kusile/Dawn (MKD), narrated how money was
supposed to be channelled through to government, saying it was unusual for
money from a parastatal to be channelled for a specific purpose.

He said there was no evidence of the ZMDC board sitting to discuss paying a
royalty of such magnitude to the government.

“This shows that someone is playing cheap high stakes politics with the
citizens of Zimbabwe, particularly civil servants,” Makoni continued.

Zapu spokesman, Methuseli Moyo said this was a worrying development as it
showed that one arm of the three-part coalition government had access to
money that was not known by the others.

“This is in actual fact a parallel Finance ministry,” Moyo said. “This shows
that there are a lot of funds which are outside Treasury and only Zanu PF
people know about them.”

The Zapu spokesman said since no one knew how much was in the fund, it
begged the question on what other activities Zanu PF was willing to use the
money outside the confines of government.

“This alone should scare anyone, if there are some people with so much money
outside Treasury and the Ministry of Finance,” he said.

Moyo said Zanu PF wanted a review of the salaries because it thought they
were a critical constituency, but warned that this move could backfire, if
they failed to sustain it.

With the instability in global commodity prices, questions were asked what
would happen if diamond prices slumped and the country did not receive the
money it had projected.

Civil servants’ salaries have of late been a highly emotive subject, with
Mugabe all the while maintaining that their salaries be reviewed at a time
when the Finance ministry had said it could not afford to.

It is believed that public workers’ salaries chew almost 70% of government
revenue and Treasury could not afford a review.

The country is staring at a budget deficit of US$500 million and if Treasury
were to bankroll civil servants salaries, the deficit would balloon.


Click here or ALT-T to return to TOP

‘Democracy does not always give the best candidates’

http://www.thestandard.co.zw/

Saturday, 23 July 2011 17:48

University of Zimbabwe political scientist John Makumbe said there was need
to put a minimum educational threshold for aspiring legislators to enable
quality and constructive debate in parliament.
He said the grading must be done at party level.

“We need people who can read a policy paper and be able to comprehend it,”
said Makumbe, who added “the quality of debate in the august House is an
indication of the general collapse of debate in the country.”

Political analyst Charles Mangongera said the quality of debate underscores
the level of mediocrity within the governance structure of the legislature.
He said most of those that joined politics after 2000 were driven by bravery
rather than skill and sound academic background.

“Some of them joined politics without any grounding in academia to enable
them to grasp issues let alone comprehend them,” Mangongera said.
“This is why we have such archaic and weird proposals coming from our
legislators.”

He said both Zanu PF and the two MDC formations needed to embark on a
comprehensive talent and skills search to groom leaders of tomorrow.
Mlotshwa’s proposal also ignited debate on social network, Facebook.

Another political analyst Alex Magaisa on Facebook said the power to
govern-based on popularity alone was flawed and can be recipe for
mediocrity.
He said he adored the US system where the president chooses his cabinet from
across the board, whether or not one is a parliamentarian.

“They recognised the flaw that democracy does not always give you the best
candidates who merit the role of exercising executive powers,” he said.
One Tawanda Muchinguri said the problem rests with the people who vote such
people into office.

“Even if one was to have sex once a month without protection but with 12
people in a year what will we solve?” he said.

Magaisa said Mlotshwa made the presumption that the so-called “appetite” is
held exclusively by the male, which is not necessarily correct and has no
scientific basis.

One Bright Mushure commented, “It’s unfortunate the lawmaker has decided to
take such a long holiday from common sense. I will only take her seriously
when she comes back from the vacation.”


Click here or ALT-T to return to TOP

Aids gaffe exposes legislator

http://www.thestandard.co.zw/

Saturday, 23 July 2011 17:46

BY CAIPHAS CHIMHETE

ASPIRING legislators must have a minimum level of education to qualify for
election into the House of Assembly or Senate to enable them to comprehend
and debate crucial policy issues, political analysts have said.
Although human rights proponents would view the suggestion as
discriminatory, the analysts insisted that it was the best way to promote
good governance and national development.

This suggestion follows recent remarks by Senator for Matobo Sithembile
Mlotshwa (MDC-T) that men should be injected with “immobilisers” to reduce
their sexual desire to curb the spread of HIV and Aids.

Contributing to a debate on HIV and Aids in the Senate recently, Mlotshwa
stunned other legislators when she said it was important to reduce men’s
appetite for sex.

“If the scientists that we have here look into the issue of trying to inject
men with a substance that will make them lose appetite and use that chance
once a month at home, I think that might help,” she said.

In 2009, Mlotshwa set tongues wagging after she complained during debate on
the same topic that a condom advert was “too explicit and could encourage
women to lust for well-endowed men”.

“Those kinds of adverts affect the womenfolk. In a quest to find out whether
there is such a man, the women end up contracting HIV,” Mlotshwa said.
The Standard could not independently ascertain Mlotshwa’s educational
background.

However, her CV, which she deposited with Parliament, shows that she
attended a string of primary schools in Matabeleland South before going to
Ekusileni Secondary school in Filabusi.

She went to a polytechnic and New Vision College, a private institution.

Born in 1965 in Matobo, she joined Zapu in 1976 and then the MDC in 2000.
Mlotshwa claims to be an entrepreneur with interests in women’s affairs,
sports and culture.

She however is not alone as several other legislators have also made equally
outrageous proposals in the past few years.

Zanu PF MP for Uzumba Simbaneuta Mudarikwa once stunned the House during a
question-and-answer session when he suggested that marijuana be legalised.

Mudarikwa asked Agriculture, Mechanisation and Irrigation Development
minister Joseph Made why government prohibited the cultivation of marijuana.

“I would like to know from the minister the national policy with regards to
creating export processing zones (EPZ) in remote areas,” said Mudarikwa.
“The reason for creating the EPZs in those remote areas is so that we can
grow marijuana.”

His CV says he did ‘O’ level at Murehwa High School before enrolling at
Highfield High School for ‘A’ level as an external student.

Mudarikwa, who boasts having several children, also attended Bo Ben Botac
Military Academy in Yugoslavia.

Mubhawu suggested isolation of those living with HIV and Aids

Former Tafara-Mabvuku MP Timothy Mubhawu (MDC) once courted the ire of HIV
and Aids activists when he said Zimbabwe should quarantine all people with
HIV and Aids and fast-track their demise by denying them anti-retroviral
drugs.

This, he said, would curb further spread of the virus.


Click here or ALT-T to return to TOP

Pensioners cry foul over payouts

http://www.thestandard.co.zw/

Saturday, 23 July 2011 17:44

BY JENNIFER DUBE

EDITH Goredema was happy when her life policy with a local insurer matured
last month.
She and her husband were excited as they remembered how they managed to buy
all roofing material for their house and some beasts from a previous policy.

But that was in the early 1990s.

“We rushed to the company’s offices and completed the paperwork,” she said.

“We could not wait to go to the bank and asked them to tell us how much
there was and they said we needed to be patient as the money would be in our
account soon.

“But our excitement was punctured when we found only US$100 in the account.
They had deposited US$106 and the US$6 had gone to bank charges.”

Goredema said they could not understand how they ended up getting so little
money for a 1994 policy which they had serviced religiously throughout the
period of  economic hardships.

They also paid their premiums after dollarisation.

“What it means is that we only got a re-imbursement of the money we paid
since dollarisation and nothing for all the other years yet these companies
used our money to buy properties and also bought foreign currency during the
days of ‘burning’,” she said.

“This is so unfair.

“We have always known that insurance is an investment and if you have failed
to do something meaningful, at least a beast (cow) would be fine but US$100
can only buy three goats.”

A survey showed that some companies were paying as little as US$20 for
policies maturing this year while other payments stood at US$50.

Policy holders said they felt robbed and were discouraged from entertaining
insurance company representatives currently visiting their workplaces
persuading them to take up policies.

“They are daylight robbers,” another disappointed client raved.

“When they are selling their policies, they behave like a man courting a
woman. They are persuasive and paint a rosy picture of their services but
when they give you US$20 and you try to get an explanation, nobody
entertains you.”

“We feel for our clients who are exiting now because they are getting very
little,” Fidelity Life Assurance of Zimbabwe’s operations director Paul
Razunguzwa, who also sits in the Zimbabwe Association of Pension Funds
board, said.

“Yes, most companies invested in property but the values of these are
currently very low due to low occupation, low rentals and a very high
defaulting rate in rent payments.

“A property which brings zero income is worthless.

“But we are seeing signs of good times ahead so much that if the economy
fully recovers, if the macro environment   improves, policy holders will
enjoy increased benefits.”

How removal of  zeros impacted on policies

The removal of three zeros in August 2006 also meant that those with
premiums of less than Z$1 000 lost everything as they deposited it and the
losses continued with further removal of zeros.

Some companies said they advised policy holders to adjust their sum assured
and premiums as hyper-inflation continued to gallop but very few did that
and those few are enjoying the benefits now.

Why we are paying peanuts: Insurers

insurance companies confirmed they were paying paltry sums insisting this
was the total worth of the policies.

They claimed some clients actually deserved “nothing” but some companies
came up with “thank you” schemes whereby they paid policy holders a little
token of appreciation for being clients over the years.

“A lot of people stopped paying their premiums around 2005 and throughout
the hyperinflationary period,” an official with an insurance company said.
“These are the people who are giving us problems now but each policy clearly
states a period within which an unserviced policy lapses.

“A lot of them came back after dollarisation asking for their dollars but
even if we were to remove the period within which an unserviced policy
lapses, you will still find that a lot of factors rendered their accounts
worthless.”

They explained that from 2005, they were paying more money to banks to
access deposited premiums and in some cases, they had to pay seven times the
deposited amount.

“Insurance companies buy equity on the stock exchange, they also buy
property and pay what is called the prescribed assets ratio requirement
which was 45% at the time and also invest in the money market,” Razunguzwa
said.

“A systemic failure which cannot be blamed on any one company resulted in
the loss of everything except for residual assets in the equity and property
sectors and that is what is being shared at the moment although the values
are subdued.”

Equity, which relates to shares on the stock exchange, was affected when the
Zimbabwe Stock Exchange closed in November 2008.

When it re-opened in February 2009, companies, which had been rendered
worthless by the closure, were valued at one cent.

They said the bulk of the prescribed assets were government treasury bills
which were never paid while all the money companies put in the banks was
also rendered worthless.


Click here or ALT-T to return to TOP

NSSA hit by shares scandal

http://www.thestandard.co.zw/

Saturday, 23 July 2011 17:14

BY CAIPHAS CHIMHETE

THE National Social Security Authority (NSSA) has suspended its equities
manager, James Chiwera, for allegedly manipulating the fund’s equity deals
in a scam that could have prejudiced the authority of thousands of dollars.
The issue was brought to the fore by Southern Trust Securities (Pvt) Limited
who wrote to NSSA general manager James Matiza on May 31, expressing their
displeasure on how Chiwera was conducting the authority’s business
transactions.

Documents in our possession show that Chiwera would sell his shares and
those of his children and wife to NSSA without declaring his interests.
The documents indicate that between February and April this year, Chiwera
sold his shares in Ariston and Pioneer to NSSA.

“We write to register our displeasure on how your equities dealer is
conducting NSSA business,” says the letter.

“We wonder whether you know what is happening ... this guy is selling to
NSSA his own shares. The whole market is concerned with the manner of
business conduct.”

“Please investigate and take corrective measures before all his friends’
shares are sold to NSSA and also before it leaks to the press,” the letter
says. All the share certificates bear the same Marlborough address and also
have the Chiwera surname.

The letter says among those on whose behalf Chiwera sold shares are
Mutsawaishe, Kudakwashe and Kudzai. They all use Chiwera as their surname.
A senior NSSA official Tendai Mafunda confirmed that Chiwera was on
suspension. He however referred questions to Mike Hamilton, the authority’s
public relations consultant.

Hamilton also confirmed that Chiwera has been suspended pending
investigations into allegations of misconduct.

“Should investigations con- firm that he has a case to answer, a
disciplinary hearing is likely to be held before the end of July,” he said.

NSSA has in the past years been under fire for paying low pensions which the
Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions described as “worthless”.

NSSA runs a social protection programme that provides individuals with
income security when faced with the contingencies of old age, survivorship,
incapacity, disability or unemployment.

However, the authority has courted controversy for paying paltry packages to
injured workers or retired people while investing massively in properties,
listed and unlisted stocks. It also pays its senior managers handsomely.

NSSA has also been accused of financing business projects owned by
politicians and their cronies, as well as ill-conceived transactions that
have resulted in serious prejudice to pensioners.

Interest ceiling on Nssa cash

Meanwhile, in a statement issued on its behalf, NSSA said it had told banks
that any money it provides them with for loans to businesses must in future
be lent at an interest rate of no more than 15%, including interest payable
to NSSA and any handling charges.

NSSA general manager James Matiza told bankers, at a meeting he held with
them at NSSA headquarters on Wednesday, that it would be a condition of any
finance provided by NSSA to banks after August 1 that it was lent to
businesses at an interest rate of no more than 15%.

“No matter what period the loan was lent for, from 30 days up to 365 days,
the interest rate should be no more than this amount. That might not make
economic sense normally but Zimbabwe’s economy at present was not normal,”
he said.

NSSA might review the position after a year.

Se tiam pra? quam nonsu in nondam porem o Cast publiam sim opteri tabem
ocaest acentie ssederes caesse orum nesse cuppliciptes vis, cis tam rei
sernius,


Click here or ALT-T to return to TOP

Bulawayo company closures acts of sabotage —MDC-T

http://www.thestandard.co.zw/

Saturday, 23 July 2011 17:13

BY NQOBILE BHEBHE

MDC-T Bulawayo province on Friday launched an initiative aimed at reviving
industries in the city in what observers said was a parallel project   to
another one spearheaded by government under the “Let Bulawayo Survive”
banner.
The conference, attended by MDC-T Matabeleland- based cabinet ministers and
legislators, were held under the theme “Working Together To Re-industrialise
Bulawayo”.

The province said it would forward the resolutions to its National Executive
with a view of moving a motion in parliament and tabling it in Cabinet for
action.

However, two months ago Cabinet set a seven-member ministerial task force
committee chaired by Industry and Commerce minister, Welshman Ncube to look
at possibilities of reviving Bulawayo’s industrial sector that has virtually
collapsed.

Scores of firms have closed shop in Bulawayo, which was once the country’s
industrial hub with around 75% of manufacturing activity centred in the
city, citing lack of access to capital and perennial water shortages.

Speaker of Parliament Lovemore Moyo said the closure of industries was an
act of sabotage. “There has been no substantial policy response from
government and the business sector.

“The response to this challenge would be solved when financial decisions are
moved from Harare and decentralised.

“It is highly possible that the de-industrialisation in Bulawayo could be a
calculated act of sabotage by some decision-makers in government and
business,” Moyo said.

He demanded a clear government supported action plan with “unambiguous
strategies of how it intends to stop closure of factories”.

Although Moyo acknowledged the setting up of a Cabinet committee, he said
“there is no urgency to come up with concrete measures to revive the
industries.”

Minister of State Enterprises and Parastatals, Gorden Moyo, who is also
MDC -T Bulawayo provincial chairman said the resolutions taken are pro-poor
as the party is not for capitalists.

“We will present the document to the Cabinet task force,” he said.  “As we
control parliament we will force the house to debate the issues of
Matabeleland.”

However, Bulawayo-based economist Eric Bloch said although he was deeply
concerned about de-industrialisation of Bulawayo, it is a misconception that
the city was the only one affected.

“It’s not just a Bulawayo problem but a national one. It’s a misconception
because Bulawayo has always been the industrial hub but industries in Harare
are also struggling.

“The solution is the recovery of the Zimbabwe economy as a whole” Bloch
said.


Click here or ALT-T to return to TOP

Nyikayaramba blamed for NRZ demise

http://www.thestandard.co.zw/

Saturday, 23 July 2011 17:07

By Kudzai Chimhangwa

A minister has blamed the collapse of the National Railways of Zimbabwe
(NRZ) on the Brigadier General Douglas Nyikayaramba-led board alleging it
had folded its hands while the country’s rail network was being destroyed by
vandals and criminals.
Tichaona Mudzingwa, the Deputy Minister of Transport, Communications and
Infrastructure Development said both the board and management must shoulder
the blame for NRZ’s demise.

Nyikayaramba, the controversial commander of 3 Brigade has been accused by
Mudzingwa of clinging to the  top post on the NRZ board despite its term of
office having expired three years ago.

Government in June said a new board would  be appointed soon to replace
Nyikayaramba’s board. But Nyakayaramba has said he has not participated in
NRZ activities since his term expired in 2008.

Another former soldier, Retired Air Force of Zimbabwe Air Commodore Mike
Karakadzai is running the parastatal.

Mudzingwa specifically referred to the electrified Gweru-Harare railway
line, which has been vandalised.

“The board and management could have averted the massive damage that has
left the line completely destroyed.

“They could have requested for military assistance for deployment of troops
to secure the line, after all it is less than 300km,” said Mudzingwa adding
that the current NRZ board should be dismissed.

“This is what we are discussing and we hope to reach an agreement soon as a
ministry.

“When the lifespan of a board expires they are changed altogether or
alternatively, instructed to run the institution for six months in the
interim, we are looking for suitable candidates.”

There have been numerous reports of maladministration and incompetence at
the NRZ, once regarded as one of the region’s biggest railway transport
companies.

Mudzingwa said the new board, once appointed, will have to work hard to turn
around NRZ’s fortunes.

He said government expected the rail transporter to move nine million tonnes
of cargo annually up from between 6,4 million and 6,5 million tonnes it is
currently moving.

NRZ public relations manager Fanuel Masikati said management and the board
were currently revamping the rail transporter.

Masikati said the NRZ had beefed up security on the railway network with the
assistance of the police and other security institutions.

“We are currently engaged in a study to introduce an alternative cabling
system that is vandal-proof,” he said.

“We are rehabilitating the entire railway infrastructure, not only in terms
of the telecommunications system but the track itself,” he said, adding that
the NRZ has acquired 12 000 tonnes of rail from China to facilitate the
process.

iNDIGENISATION FACTOR...

Tichaona Mudzingwa, however says  efforts to rehabilitate the loss-making
National Railways of Zimbabwe were being hampered by the uncertainty caused
by the indigenisation laws.

He said there were investors from Algeria, South Africa, India, Canada and
Australia that had expressed interest in revamping the country’s railway
network but were put off by inconsistent government policies.

“It is quite saddening,” Mudzingwa said. “One can easily tell from the
questions that they (investors) ask that they are worried about the security
of their investments and the implications of indigenisation.”

NRZ’s  long struggle to secure rolling stock

NRZ has over the years battled a chronic shortage of locomotives with just
65 out of 185 said to be functional. About 3 400 out of 8 300 wagons are
also said to be serviceable.

Government has so far been rehabilitating 10 wagons per month at a cost of
US$500 each while a single locomotive has been serviced at a cost of US$300
every three months.

But the NRZ has benefited from the government bankrolled modernisation of
signaling equipment to make use of global positioning system (GPS)
technology.

The system currently operational on less than 500km of the rail network, is
being used on the Gweru-Bulawayo and Bulawayo-Hwange routes.

Paul Mavima, the principal director in Deputy Prime Minister Arthur
Mutambara’s office said the revival of NRZ was crucial if Zimbabwe’s economy
was to be resuscitated.

“Rail transport costs are less than half the cost of road transportation so
the railway system is certainly of strategic importance to the country,”
said Mavima, whose office is tasked with spearheading private-public
partnerships (PPPs.)


Click here or ALT-T to return to TOP

Zanu PF property-grabbing sparks panic

http://www.thestandard.co.zw/

Saturday, 23 July 2011 17:07

BY NQOBANI NDLOVU

BULAWAYO — A number of Indian businesspeople have been putting their
properties and businesses up for sale since Zanu PF youths stepped up their
campaign to seize unoccupied buildings in the city.
The youths are targeting buildings owned by businesspeople of Indian origin
and white Zimbabweans saying its part of the government’s empowerment
programme.

A long list of companies, including some of the city’s well-known brands are
up for sale, investigations by Standardbusiness have revealed.

But Hindu Society chairperson, Vijay Mehta whose organisation represents a
number of businesspeople of Indian origin could not confirm nor deny that
the rush to sell properties was sparked by the invasions.

“It is true that of late, there are businesspeople from our society who have
put up their businesses for sale but I cannot say that this is because of
what is happening,” Mehta said.

Buildings owned by Indians that have been invaded by Zanu PF youths include
Zambesia and Canberra flats located between Leopold Takawira Street and
Sixth Avenue.

The militant Zanu PF youths have also grabbed Capri building which houses
the Pizzaghetti owned by the Di Palma family who are of Italian origin.

Recently, the youths blocked Khalil Gaibie, from evicting tenants from his
Elons Court building over late payment of rentals, adding that they have
taken over the building.

Absolom Sikhosana, the Zanu-PF national youth chairman told Standardbusiness
that the party leadership had not sanctioned the invasions.

Zanu PF provincial chairman, Isaac Dakamela has also on numerous occasions
voiced concern over the grabbing of businesses.


Click here or ALT-T to return to TOP

Banker says pay should be linked to productivity

http://www.thestandard.co.zw/

Saturday, 23 July 2011 17:05

BY KUDZAI KUWAZA

VICTORIA FALLS — Kingdom Financial Holdings group chief executive officer
Lynn Mukonoweshuro has said calls for increased wages and salaries should be
linked to levels of productivity.
Speaking at the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Zimbabwe Winter School
in Victoria Falls recently, Mukonoweshuro said there is no relationship
between wage demands and current levels of productivity.

She noted that the low levels of productivity was demonstrated by Zimbabwe’s
136th position out of 139 on the World Economic Forum Global Competitive
Index.

Mukonoweshuro said the need to resolve the disparity between wage
expectations and productivity levels needed to be addressed on a long-term
national level and not on sectoral basis.

She expressed concern that there was neither information nor statistics in
the post-dollarisation era to support the levels of wage demands by
employees.
Mukonoweshuro emphasised the need to address the issue of the counrty’s
politics to spur economic growth.

“Unless our political issues are resolved we will continue to have problems
with foreign direct investment inflow and sovereignty risk,” she warned.

The country, she said, would continue to access short-term funding from
international institutions as long as there was inconsistencies in
government policy
She said that policy changes have to be sensitive to the economy and urged
delegates to “start preaching, influencing and lobbying for policy changes”.


Click here or ALT-T to return to TOP

StandardComment: Unofficial pay hike a dangerous precedent

http://www.thestandard.co.zw/

Saturday, 23 July 2011 17:28

Civil servants received an upward alteration of their salaries last week but
the manner in which it was handled stinks.
Under Zimbabwe’s laws, it is the Ministry of Finance which is responsible
for the management of public funds but it was sidelined, as was the key
Ministry of Public Service when President Robert Mugabe turned to the
Zimbabwe Mining Development Corporation (ZMDC) for the US$40 million needed
for the increments.

The way the money, raised through the sale of diamonds mined at Chiadzwa,
was deposited into the government salaries account without the involvement
of the Ministry of Finance is a serious cause for concern.

Among other things, it shows that Mugabe, after being snubbed by the
Ministry of Finance, now has a parallel source of money in the form of
Chiadzwa diamonds.

As shown last week, these funds are available to Mugabe without either the
consent of the Finance ministry or the scrutiny of other partners in the
inclusive government.

Over the past few months Mugabe has had headaches dealing with Finance
minister Tendai Biti who has stopped the looting of the Treasury by Zanu PF
chefs.

Biti is known for insisting that the government has to “eat what it has
gathered”.

So stopping Biti from laying his hands on diamond funds was Mugabe’s best
way of going ahead with his populist promises to civil servants.

But this move, which should be condemned in the strongest terms, is a
reflection of the lawlessness that has become synonymous with Zanu PF rule.
This usurpation of the Finance ministry’s powers demonstrates how diamond
revenues can easily be used to fuel conflict if not used wisely and
accountably.

What next are the diamond revenues illegally held in ZMDC coffers going to
be used for? To arm Zanu PF militias during election times, perhaps? Or, in
the case of electoral loss, to destabilise the country?

Last week’s action is the beginning of warlordism. The Kimberley Process
should take note and act accordingly so that the money raised from Chiadzwa
diamonds is not abused in this manner.


Click here or ALT-T to return to TOP

SundayOpinion: Zanu PF subverts role of defence forces

http://www.thestandard.co.zw/

Saturday, 23 July 2011 17:26

By Wifred Mhanda

There is a raging public debate on security sector reform that has been
triggered by controversial remarks by senior military officers.
Brigadier-General Douglas Nyikayaramba, commander of 3 Infantry Brigade
based in Mutare recently declared in an interview with the Zimbabwe
Independent, that Mugabe and Zanu PF should rule forever, and poured scorn
on the Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai. He declared that Zanu PF would win
the next election and that he was prepared to fight and die for Mugabe. In
further utterances, he designated the PM to be a national security threat
and not a political one, in response to a challenge by Tsvangirai for the
pro-Zanu PF generals to take off their uniforms and enter the political
fray.

The remarks by Nyikayaramba are patently political and partisan and
disrespectful of the PM’s office and not expected of a serving military
officer of such a senior rank. The remarks follow on similar utterances by
the so-called securocrats who include among their rank Police
Commissioner-General Augustine Chihuri, that they would never salute
Tsvangirai if he won an election to become president. Indeed, they
spearheaded the bloody campaign for Mugabe’s re-election in June 2008.

The country’s service chiefs, in a joint statement at a press conference
ahead of the March 2002 presidential election, declared that the office of a
head of state was a straight jacket that could not be occupied by anyone
without liberation war credentials. The reaction to the remarks by
Nyikayaramba have to be seen in the context of the trend by senior military
officers to identify themselves with Mugabe and Zanu PF in violation of the
standards of a professional defence force that should place the national
interest above partisan sectional considerations.

The remarks by Nyikayaramba have thus rekindled the debate on the
appropriateness of political and partisan utterances by serving senior
military officers. It is clear that their remarks are in contravention of
the provisions of the Constitution of Zimbabwe, the Defence Act, the Police
Act and the Prisons Act for the establishment of professional and
non-partisan security forces. The disparaging remarks by the commanders of
the security forces directed at Mugabe’s opponents should be contrasted with
the conduct of the Rhodesian security forces in 1980 following Mugabe’s and
Zanu PF’s victory in the 1980 Independence elections. The overwhelming
majority of the former Rhodesian security forces and their commanders
respected the outcome of the election and accepted the new political order.

Admittedly, there were some recalcitrant elements that resisted the new
order as evidenced by the destruction of some aircraft at Thornhill Airbase
in Gweru in the early 1980s. That notwithstanding, the majority of the
former Rhodesian security forces remained loyal to the new government of
Prime Minister Robert Mugabe with some still in service to date. That is
what is expected of professional security forces; respecting the outcome of
an election as an expression of the will of the majority of the people.

During the liberation struggle, the liberation forces were considered to be
the people’s forces that fought for the people’s liberation and their
protection from the Rhodesian security forces. The present record of the
country’s security forces is now the exact opposite of this expectation with
the security forces visiting abuse and atrocities on defenceless civilians;
the very people they are supposed to serve and protect. They have
orchestrated Zanu PF’s violent election campaigns since 2000 that saw
thousands of people killed, tortured and women raped and their homes and
property destroyed for no crime than their constitutional support for the
opposition.

Such forces can never be considered to be people’s forces on account of
their acts of terror against the people. Zimbabweans have been left
wondering what has gone wrong with the country’s security forces that have
reduced themselves to become Zanu PF militia. This was not their expectation
when they supported the fight for freedom, democracy, social justice,
respect for human dignity and peace.

During the war, Zanla forces operated according to the dictum: “The party
commands the gun and the gun must never be allowed to command the party”.
After independence the maxim translated to: “The nation commands the gun and
the gun must never be allowed to command the nation”.
(To be continued next week.)

About the Author
l Mhanda is a veteran of the liberation war. His nom de guerre was Dzinashe
Machingura.


Click here or ALT-T to return to TOP

From the Editor's Desk: The chickens come home to roost for wa Mutharika

http://www.thestandard.co.zw/

Saturday, 23 July 2011 17:25

By Nevanji Madanhire

On May 1 this year, this column had an instalment entitled Wa Mutharika Cuts
His Nose To Spite His Face. It turns out the article was prophetic. Malawi
was in chaos last week as thousands of its citizens took to the streets in
three main cities to demonstrate against his government.
He has just had his police murder 18 people who were among the peaceful
demonstrators;  hundreds more were injured.

The people were demonstrating against his mismanagement of the economy which
has resulted in a debilitating shortage of fuel worsened by an equally
debilitating shortage of foreign currency.

As they say, wa Mutharika now has blood on his hands; in Zimbabwe we say on
his chest, meaning he will forever smell it and it will haunt him throughout
his life.

Wa Mutharika on Friday tried to shift the blame, fingering his estranged
former deputy Joyce Banda, opposition leader John Tembo and civil society
leaders for the death of the demonstrators.

He told them: “The blood of these people who have died is on you. Let their
spirits haunt you at night.”

But this is merely passing the buck. The truth of the matter is that wa
Mutharika is personally responsible for each jot of blood spilled in the
state-sponsored violence that he used to suppress the peaceful
demonstrations which had initially been okayed by the police.

Wa Mutharika also tellingly promised to go after leaders of future
demonstrations. He said his patience had worn out. “This time I’ll go after
you! Even if you hide in holes I’ll smoke you out!”

By these threats wa Mutharika has only confirmed what the world already
feared. Expelled British High Commissioner to Malawi Fergus Cochrane-Dyet
had put it succinctly in a leaked diplomatic cable when he said wa Mutharika
was a “combative president” who was becoming “ever more autocratic and
intolerant of criticism”.

Wa Mutharika has in recent months moved to put in place restrictions on the
press and academic freedom. He has had a law enacted that empowers his
minister of information to shut down newspapers which he deems “contrary to
the public interest”.

Three private radio stations have already been shut under this law so they
would not report on the demonstrations. Another offending law gives police
the power to carry out searches without a warrant. Yet another law blocks
people or groups from taking out injunctions against the government. Local
elections have been postponed for six years.

Wa Mutharika has shut down news websites and social media networks such as
Twitter and Facebook to prevent users from coordinating the demonstrations
and he has ordered Internet service providers to shut down.

In the previous column (Wa Mutharika Cuts His Nose To Spite His Face, The
Standard May 1 2011)  it was averred that wa Mutharika had never really been
democratic but fate thrust democracy upon him. Historians say wa Mutharika
was actually a beneficiary of Banda’s development programmes. In 1964 —
shortly after what was dubbed Cabinet Crisis, wa Mutharika was one of the 32
Malawians, selected by Banda to travel to India on a scholarship for “fast
track” diplomas and possible posting into the then white-dominated civil
service. In other words, wa Mutharika did not go into exile in reaction to
the political crisis in Malawi but as a beneficiary of it.

According to online publications wa Mutharika has upheld the memory of Banda
as a national hero, saying that he would continue Banda’s work. In September
2004, he restored Banda’s name to the national stadium, the central
hospital, and the international airport; first post-Banda president Bakili
Muluzi had removed Banda’s name from all three places. Wa Mutharika was
present at the May 2006 unveiling of a mausoleum for Banda that cost US$620
000.

He also has his own delusions of grandeur. He has built a white marble
mausoleum for his late first wife Zimbabwean-born Ethel Zvauya in imitation
of Mughal emperor Shah Jahan who built the Taj Mahal in memory of his third
wife, Mumtaz Mahal.

He has in a short period of time taken Malawi back to the days of Kamuzu
Banda and even beyond because, clearly, Malawi is going the Zimbabwe way.
President Robert Mugabe has always been intolerant of criticism which he has
harshly suppressed ever since he came to power in 1980. Not only did he wish
to establish a centralist one-party state in which criticism of him and his
policies would be anathema but he was prepared to use the uniformed forces
to force his way. This was demonstrated early on in his reign when he tried
to violently suppress dissent in southwest Zimbabwe in a period now
notoriously known as Gukurahundi.

When credible opposition to his rule was born around the turn of the
century, state-sponsored violence to suppress dissent became the norm. The
new laws that wa Mutharika has promulgated are an echo of those that Mugabe
put in place in Zimbabwe. The powers that wa Mutharika has vested on the
police and the minister of information are a replica of those that our own
police have been endowed with.

Demonstrations are forcibly suppressed here and wa Mutharika has taken a
leaf out of our own book.

The next developments in Malawi are very predicatable. It is clear that
because he now has blood on his chest wa Mutharika has lost the legitimacy
to rule Malawi and he and his party will not win any future elections in
Malawi. Constitutionally he is not allowed to stand in the next elections
but like most African presidents, he has attempted to alter the country’s
constitution so he can stand for another term. It is said because this was
going to be virtually impossible wa Mutharika was working towards anointing
a brother of his to succeed him.

But he may try other tricks; he has already postponed local elections for
six years. He may do the same with national elections. This might sound too
grotesque to contemplate but we will see how from now he will have to depend
more and more on the uniformed forces to keep himself in power. His police
force has already killed people; they will be willing to continue. Wa
Mutharika’s threats reinforce this possibility.

To his advantage he has a youth brigade that is willing to kill on his
behalf and it won’t be surprising if in the next few days his generals come
to the fore of Malawian politics as securocrats. He has already replaced the
army commander.

Malawi’s hope lies in pushing him out as was done to the leaders of Tunisia
and Egypt; not doing so will prolong the suffering of the Malawians.

Back to the Top
Back to Index