Kirsty to train Byo swimmers

The Chronicle

31 January 2013

SWIMMING icon Kirsty Coventry will be in Bulawayo today where she will visit various schools and conduct training sessions for students.

Today she will be at Mpopoma High School.

This was confirmed by the Matabeleland Amateur Swimming Board (MASB) chairman Eddie Cyprianos who said the Olympic gold medallist will work with the seniors on Saturday from 12noon to 5pm at the City Pool.

On Sunday she will be training juniors from 9am to 12non at Hillside Teachers College.

“Kirsty is definitely coming to Bulawayo this weekend. She was invited by the Minister of Education, Sport, Arts and Culture David Coltart. She is coming for an intensive training programme and this is a great opportunity for our up-and-coming swimmers to learn from one of the world’s best,” said Cyprianos.

The swimming icon first captured the attention of the world during the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens, Greece, when she turned on the power picking up gold, silver and bronze medals.

At the 2008 Beijing Olympics she did it again when she won gold in the 200m backstroke, silver in 100m backstroke, 200m and 400m individual medley.

According to Cyprianos, Kirsty is coming at a time when Bulawayo is preparing for the Senior Nationals to be held in Harare in February. He said her presence may psyche up the local swimmers to go all the way and break records.

“Actually her presence alone will push our swimmers to clock better times and maybe one day compete in the Olympics and bring glory to the nation like what she did. Kirsty honed her swimming skills here in Bulawayo as a kid before she moved to the capital and  then kept the world spellbound during the Olympic Games,” said Cyprianos.

Meanwhile, MASB has announced the names of swimmers who will represent Matabeleland during the Senior Nationals in Harare.

Matabeleland Swimming Team

11-12 Girls

Maryke Koen, Georgina Roberts, Savannah Du Preez, Olivia Rosenfels, Sancia Bravo, Siduduziwe Mswabuki, Wandile Banda.

11-12 Boys

Grant Smith, Liam O’ Hara, Rowan Isemonger, Quinton Tayali, Denilson Cyprianos, Tarrel Cook, Eden van Wyk, Lavarn Jacks, Josh McKonie.

13-14 Girls

Courtney McAllister, Jessica McAllister, Norah Tagwireyi, Melisa Tayali, Takudzwa Chitima, Bianca Zeelie.

13-14 Boys

Luke van Bredan, Takudzwa Nyamutsamba, Takunda Mashaya, Dylan Ferguson, Jaryd Lezar, Phiwo Moyo, Mthabisi Mpofu, Jordan Edwards.

15-16 Girls

Mieke Koen, Jessica Hammond, Estelle Stambolie, Selina Emanuel, Kristy Simon.

15-16 Boys

Robert Zeelie, Richie Hammond, Liam Biehan, Michael Anderson, Anesu Sebastian, Besel Williams, Jordan Lezar, Brendon Cyprianos, Ross Oatley, Dave van der Berg.

17 and over Girls

Avalon Bruce (captain)

17 and over Boys

Andressious Cyprianos (captain), Andrew John Stambolie, Ashby Tinky, Frank Lang, Kurt Steiner, Joshua Lezar.

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Where rains are a nightmare

The Herald

By Felex Share

31 January 2013

WHILE the heavy rains that have pounded most parts of the country have promised plenitude, they are certainly not such a boon for pupils at Mt Darwin’s Tsenga Primary School. The rains certainly present a nightmare not only as they drench the poor kids on their way to and from school: they do not spare them in the makeshift mud-and-pole classrooms that make their satellite school. With feet submerged in mud and no adequate furniture, the children have no option but to acquire education under these harsh conditions.

All their enterprising parents could do was to put up these rudimentary structures which, without roofs, or leaking roofs if any and without cement floors, only but leave the children at the mercy of the elements. Tsenga Primary School, a satellite centre for Chiswiti Primary School some 10km adrift, is located about 80km from Mt Darwin Centre and has an enrolment of 330 pupils from Grade One up to Four.

Most of the pupils walk for more than 10km to school and they come from surrounding areas such as Tsenga, Mupapa, Gweja and Mutasa.

“Our situation is terrible and as you can see the children have no option but to learn with feet submerged in the mud,” said the school’s deputy headmaster Mr Wonder Guruza. “Our plight worsens during the rainy season as there will not be adequate shelter to protect the pupils, staff and the few books that we have.”

He said a significant number of children drop out of school during the rainy season. “They are afraid of coming to school because the environment is not conducive. The rains can start anytime and there is nowhere to find shelter because our thatched roofs sometimes cannot stand the heavy rains,” he said.

“Moreover, it is dangerous to keep the pupils when such weather conditions are prevailing.” And the teachers are not spared, either. With mud-and-pole rondavels that have sagging and leaking roofs, and having to cook outside when it is not raining while they have to bath in the open and having to share a single grass latrine, staff at the school have a hard time. There are four female and four male teachers at Tsenga. Teachers shun the school because of poor housing and lack of other amenities such as running water, electricity and health facilities.

Mr Guruza said it is a “mammoth task” to lure teachers to the school. He explained: “The teachers are not willing to join us because of the living and working conditions. There are no incentives to entice them and it is a mammoth task to get the staff a teaching staff like the one we have at the moment.” Help has been elusive for the beleaguered school.

The headmaster said the local Member of Parliament for the area, Dickson Mafios, was aware of the situation while donors had promised them learning materials, although nothing has materialised for the past five or so years.

“We are still to hear from them,” said the hopeful head. “The MP promised to build a block and we are still waiting for that and donors like World Vision had promised to help with other building and learning materials and we eagerly await the same,” he said.

The traditional leader of the area, Shoti Kanzou who is Chief Chiswiti, appealed to Government to intervene saying child education in his area was under threat. “Every child has a right to education but there is no hope if the children are learning under such conditions,” he said.

“Children are the future leaders of the country but the future is doomed if the children do not get support.” Chief Chiswiti said the children faced a bleak future as their parents and guardians lack the means to fund their education.

“What else can the parents do when they do not have the money? Of course, they can mould bricks but there is no money to buy the materials for moulding like cement. The school needs support because it is helping a lot of people from surrounding areas,” he said.

Education, Sport, Arts and Culture Minister David Coltart noted that the situation at Tsenga was emblematic of the problems with most satellite schools. He said it was “uneconomic” to build schools in scarcely populated areas.

“Satellite schools are one of the greatest problems we have in the education sector. The physical structures at those schools need to be upgraded but there are additional problems in doing so.

“The class sizes are too small because while the optimum teacher to pupil ratio at normal schools is 1:40 at satellite that ratio might be 1:15 and you will find that it is uneconomical to build a school in such an area.”

He said Government should adequately support the education sector.

“We cannot also talk of building schools when we can’t maintain existing ones. In essence I have commissioned investigations into satellite schools to find answers on how best we can deal with satellite schools. The investigations are being done under the auspices of the Education Transition Fund.

“I think after the investigation we will be able to understand the extent of the problem and come up with recommendations,” he said.

The ETF is a joint venture between Government and the donor community aimed at mobilising funding for the education sector. The country has more than 700 satellite primary and secondary schools, most of them established after the Land Reform Programme in 2000. Because of appalling learning conditions most of the satellite schools record very low passes. Most of these satellite schools operate from tobacco barns, disused mine buildings and old chicken runs.

Children in these schools are exposed to extremely harsh learning conditions with no furniture and educators. In fact, it brings to question the country’s subscription to the universally accepted norm that: “Every child has a right to an education.”

For the rural child, poverty is real as many of their parents or guardians cannot afford providing them with school fees and even a decent meal. Teachers’ Union of Zimbabwe chief executive Mr Manuel Nyawo said it was Government’s responsibility to ensure that satellite schools have proper infrastructure. “Government should ensure that there are adequate learning facilities and qualified teachers in order to meet the United Nations set standards on education,” he said.

“The schools are serving a purpose because they are catering for disadvantaged communities.” According to the Zimbabwe Education Act, all children have the right to education yet problems subsist in Government’s endeavour to provide the same, although Zimbabwe is ranked the top literate nation in Africa.

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Coltart could reverse gains made in cricket

Daily News

By Guthrie Munyuki

31 January 2013

Zimbabwe Cricket (ZC) managing director Wilfred Mukondiwa is a gentleman at the heart of a gentlemen’s game.

His firm commitment to cricket is never in doubt even in the face of stormy waters created by a directive from Education, Sports, Arts and Culture minister David Coltart which have torched a racial storm.

Mukondiwa believes the tempestuous issue is well within his grasp to handle because racism is just a peripheral matter which cannot stop him from taking the game to a new level.

Yet, he warns: “What we cannot deny is that however, well-intentioned, the directive is, firstly, it is constitutionally and legally flawed and, secondly, it will have consequences that could reverse the gains and developments made in cricket over the last two decades”.

Coltart’s directive scheduled to come into force next month (February) has drawn outrage and stinging criticism from the majority who believe that it’s a racist ploy intended to sideline black officials from holding positions of influence in the national team.

“All national sport associations whose national team selection is conducted by national selectors shall ensure that such selectors have the requisite experience and skills.

“In particular, no person shall be appointed as a selector unless they have represented Zimbabwe in the particular sport,” read part of the measures.

But, in a dramatic turn of events, the Sports and Recreation Commission (SRC), whose silence had been touching when the race row erupted, prompting an ugly exchange of expletives between Coltart and the cricket fraternity, has amended the contentious clauses.

The ZC board contends the amendments are still of no effect and illegal because there has been no board (SRC) resolution endorsing them.

Part of the watered down amendments read: “Not less than fifty percent (50 percent) of the selectors shall have represented Zimbabwe as athletes / players at the senior level in the particular sport discipline provided that all chairpersons / convenors shall be former national team players/athletes.

Those who have witnessed a revolution in this sport suspect Coltart wants to reverse the gains made in cricket whose mass participation today is a reflection of Zimbabwe’s population demographics in that sport.

“One of the major goals of ZC is to offer equal opportunities to all in cricket and spread the game. The sustainability of any activity in any country is dependent on the involvement of the indigenous majority. This has been achieved in Zimbabwean cricket.

“It must be noted here that ZC shares the national interest and desire to see an improvement in the performance of our national teams. Our stance on improving and developing the game is that policies should be long term and sustainable.

“The focus now is on improving the quality of all facets of the game at all levels. Through the franchise system launched in 2009, we have spread cricket to all corners of Zimbabwe. There are now over 100 young men, black and white, who can be classified as professional full-time cricketers — an increase by almost 80 percent,” Mukondiwa, who has been with the ZC for a decade, told the Daily News this week.

Mukondiwa left his job at the University of Zimbabwe where he was Registrar in 2003 to join the ZC during the World Cup in South Africa. It was baptism of fire for him as white Zimbabwean cricketers, allegedly taking instructions from Coltart, wore black armbands to protest against the “death of democracy in Zimbabwe”.

This was interpreted to mean the takeover of vast tracts of land once held by minority farmers and the takeover of cricket by black administrators who wanted to re-align the game to reflect the population demographics on Zimbabwe in that sport.

Mukondiwa said the cricket revolution has borne fruits as evidenced by the spread of the game and participation. He said cricket now offers viable career options for many people either as players, administrators, technical or support staff, reiterating ZC’s education and awareness programmes have resulted in mass appreciation of the game.

Critics of the Peter Chingoka-led board have savaged the ZC for “running down” the game resulting in voluntary withdrawal from Test cricket on the back of poor performances.

But the ZC board and advocates of the revolution argued that the benefits would be felt long term and promised “we will be vindicated at the fullness of time”.

Mukondiwa said his vision was to make sure Zimbabwe returns to the golden era of the former Test playing sides.

“Development is not an event but a process, and we still have a long way to go to achieve our vision to be a successful performer in the global sports and entertainment industry.

“The playing of cricket is our core business and we are bullish about the 2013/2014 season that lies ahead.  2013 will be a very busy year for the senior men’s national team, with one outgoing and four incoming tours, India being one of these. An incoming and outgoing tour will also be arranged for the Zimbabwe ‘A’ team.

“The development programme will consist of school leagues, school festivals and tournaments, inter-franchise age group tournaments, trials, coaching camps and national age group tours.

“A lot of focus will be put on the national Under 19 Team as they prepare for the ICC Under  19 Cricket World Cup to be held in Dubai in 2014. The programme for women’s cricket will comprise school leagues and tournaments, club leagues, an inter-franchise tournament, international tours and participation in the ICC Women’s T20 World Cup Global Qualifiers to be held in Ireland in August 2013,” Mukondiwa told the Daily News.

He revealed that since taking over from Ozius Bvute, he had spent the better part of 2012 crystallising the ZC’s short to medium term visions which pinned on three Cs — Consolidation, Commitment and Competitiveness. “As ZC we want to consolidate the gains and progress we have made in the last decade especially in the area of spreading the game and making it accessible to all Zimbabweans.

For consolidation to take place in such a challenging operating environment, we need people who are 100 percent committed to the vision.

But to achieve its goals, the ZC chief is looking to increasing revenue generation as he bids to keep alive cricket, schools cricket and facility maintenance.

These have been affected by the harsh liquidity environment currently prevailing in the market.

“Much has been reported about the current financial situation at ZC and often only half the story is told.
In the past, the nature of our business was such that even after fulfilling our responsibilities toward the national team, age-group teams and development projects, we remained in a surplus.”

“The franchise system introduced in 2009 resulted in the development budget ballooning to incorporate five professionally run franchises across the country; each of which required new administrative and structural investment.”

“What was clear was that cricket could no longer be run on the old business model and we needed to restructure our financing in order to launch and run the franchise system. We are therefore sustaining the franchise system using debt financing and will continue to do so over the two to three years.”

“We were very clear from the onset of the effect this would have on our balance sheet but for us, the long-term effect the franchise system would have on the performance of the national team by far outweighed the temporary cash flow challenges we would encounter.”

“We are confident that the franchise system will be able to sustain itself and we are starting to simultaneously reduce our funding to them as they achieve self-sustenance. At the conclusion of this period you will see us returning to surplus as the demands on the finances from the mother body will have reduced.”

For the record — we are confident in the gamble we have taken. It is in the national interest.

“Our revenue generation is based largely on incoming tours and through the hosting of four tours this year, we will be able to activate the revenue streams associated with broadcasting rights, title sponsorships, gate takings and other event-generated subsidiary incomes.

“We continue to rely on the support of the local corporate community to develop and sustain the domestic game and I am pleased to have seen many of our partners renewing their commitments with us,” said Mukondiwa.

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SRC directive hits Tennis Zimbabwe

News Day

By Daniel Nhakaniso

30 January 2013

TENNIS ZIMBABWE (TZ) is set to engage the Sports and Recreation Commission (SRC) as one of the sports associations set to be affected by a directive which requires selectors to have played at their highest level of competition in the particular discipline.

The directive comes into effect on Friday and could see TZ being forced to overhaul its selection committee.

Initial reports had suggested that only cricket, triathlon and lawn bowls would be affected by the directive, but tennis also looks set to be affected.

TZ has a selection committee assigned to selecting the Davis Cup team and representative junior sides for various regional and international tournaments.

The current TZ selection committee is headed by the association’s former TZ vice-president Tanya Chinamo as the convener.

Other members of the committee include Martin Lock, Petty Tshatedi, Martin Dzuwa, Freeman Nyamunokora and Petros Ndlovu.

While Lock and Dzuwa represented Zimbabwe in the Davis Cup, other members of the committee did not represent the country at the highest level.

Selection convener Chinamo played at junior level in the ’80s, the same level played by coaches Nyamunokora and Ndlovu, while Tshatedi did not represent Zimbabwe at any stage.

This is in conflict with the recently amended directive which states that: “not less than fifty percent (50%) of the selectors shall have represented Zimbabwe as athletes/players at the senior level in the particular sport discipline”.

The directive further states that: “All conveners shall be former national team players and where there is none former national team players on the selection panel, he/she shall have coaching experience or some technical expertise in the particular sport discipline.”

In the case of junior teams, the directive states that “. . . a person should have represented Zimbabwe as a player/athlete at a level not lower than the one to which the selection pertains”.
In an interview with NewsDay Sport yesterday, TZ vice-
president Regis Bhunu said they would seek audience on the directive with the SRC.

“There are still some ongoing deliberations on the issue and we are still engaging the SRC. We feel that while the directive is workable in other disciplines, it might be a different case with local tennis. For instance, the composition of the selection committee is guided by our constitution which is approved by the SRC, so before we make any changes we would have to consult them and see if we can map out the way forward together.”

Current convener Chinamo said dialogue was the way forward.

“I think dialogue is the way forward. We are not resisting the directive. In fact, we have always enjoyed very good working relations with the SRC. We are going to use dialogue in order to reconcile the SRC directive and our current selection criteria. I cannot make any further comments beyond that until we have met with the SRC,” Chinamo said.

Zimbabwe Cricket convenor Givemore Makoni has cried foul over the directive, insisting it is aimed at sidelining him from the game and has accused Education, Sport, Arts and Culture minister David Coltart of a deliberate plot to deny ZC a chance to appoint a black coach for the senior team.

Coltart has adamantly denied the charge.

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Will Zifa ever get it right?

News Day

29 January 2013

LAST WEEK we were in a jovial mood as we thought Zifa was moving in the right direction, at least in 2013, by putting in the bin Asiagate and the Warriors’ double failure to qualify for both the 2012 and the 2013 Africa Cup of Nations.

We thought that after being promised an audited report from the Mzansi 90 fundraising campaign for last year’s Angola match, we would finally lay our hands on it so that donors to the project know how their money would be well spent.

Two meetings by the board seemed to point to that direction and the fact that they were working on the budget for this year encouraged us.

But, alas, we are in for another hiding. An envisaged Football Trust has not been put in place and we now hear there is something committee, named Dollar for Football, to try and raise funding for the March 22 World Cup qualifier against Egypt.

There is another committee set up last week to investigate whether Nelson Matongorere voted in the Fifa Ballon D’or or not.

What worries us are the promises that have never been kept that a full audit of the Mzansi90 fundraising initiative would be made public. Zifa board member for finance Elliot Kasu made that promise, but we have not heard from him since the 2-0 loss to Angola.

Now, can we expect the same donor community to pour fresh funds for the Cairo trip when, clearly, the accounting system at Zifa is at loggerheads with what are proper and simple audit systems? We think not.

Zifa cannot take sponsors for granted anymore if it is to wriggle off the hook of the $4 million debt or it will forever be indebted to its president, Cuthbert Dube. The raft of measures to raise funds, mostly from levies from the Premier Soccer League (PSL), can only be a drop in the ocean compared to the debt.

In any case, the teams in the PSL are so heavily underfunded that milking the little they have will be simply to exacerbate their financial problems. A point in case is Motor Action; they made a loss of over $200 000 last year and where do we expect them to get money even to pay affiliation fess for 2013, let alone raise $100 per player for the 30 they will register this season?

On December 22, 2012, Mines minister Obert Mpofu made it clear that the Warriors would travel to Egypt for the match through support from companies that fall under his ministry.

Zifa vice- president Ndumiso Gumede and Minister of Sport David Coltart are aware of this commitment. We would, therefore, wonder where the issue of the Warriors failing to make the trip is coming from.

This is a clear indication that no one from Zifa has bothered to make a follow-up on that. And perhaps, just perhaps, Coltart has not made contact with his counterpart Mpofu to ensure the trip goes ahead.

These are trying times for football, but when an offer is made from higher offices, we demand swift follow-ups because the Warriors just have to go to Egypt.

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Treasury yet to release examiners fees

The Herald

By Felex Share 

28 January 2013

GOVERNMENT has not released a US$1,5 million Grade Seven Grant to the Zimbabwe Schools Examinations Council, resulting in its failure to pay thousands of examiners who marked last year’s public examinations.

Zimsec does not charge pupils fees for Grade Seven examinations. Government meets the costs. However, Treasury did not release funds, forcing Zimsec to divert “reserved money” for the examinations to take place.

Financial constraints within the examination body have seen it failing to pay Grade Seven, Ordinary and Advanced Level markers who are ordinarily supposed to be fully paid seven days after the end of marking.

Education, Sport, Arts and Culture Minister David Coltart on Friday said he had written to Finance Minister Tendai Biti over the issue on Thursday.

“Any cost regarding the Grade Seven examinations is the responsibility of Government. Cabinet resolved that because of cash flow problems affecting Government, Zimsec should draw down on O and A-Level examination fees to fund the writing of the Grade Seven (examinations).

It was agreed that Treasury would then reimburse the money but nothing has been released and this has in turn created cash flow problems at Zimsec. Zimsec anticipated that the money would come on time but that was not to be,” he said.

Minister Coltart added: “I have written to Minister Biti and it is our hope that the money will be released soon to settle the arrears.”

Zimsec director Mr Esau Nhandara said despite the cash flow problems, the markers would receive part of their payment this week, with Ordinary Level markers getting 45 percent, while A-Level and Grade Seven examiners would get 40 percent of their dues. Mr Nhandara said outstanding marking fees would be paid when Treasury released the US$1,5 million.

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Coltart on new board

The Standard

By Brian Nkiwane

27 January 2013

MINISTER of Education, Sport, Arts and Culture David Coltart has thrown his weight behind the new Zimbabwe National Boxing and Wrestling Control Board membership.

Coltart said with the assistance of the Sports and Recreation Commission, they had taken time to come up with the final list of board members which they had mandated to revive boxing.

Boxing made headlines during the era of the late legend Proud “Kilimanjaro” Chinembiri but later fizzled out.

“As the powers behind this, we are sure that we did a good job. We looked at the experience the person has in the sport. We then came up with a board composed of former boxers, promoters, a medical doctor and a media practitioner. We want people who are going to revive this sport,” Coltart said.

The new board members are set to receive letters of appointment next week.

The state of boxing in the country has been in dire straits with no substantive board for over a decade.

Last week, boxer Tinei Maridzo was quoted in the press urging the minister to appoint the board for the revival of the sport.

List of board members:
Paul Nenjarama (Chairman)
Lorraine Muringi
Frederick Farai Muchena
Edgar Peter Jack Hammond
Tsitsi Muzuva
Alexander Kwangwari
Gilbert Munetsi
Rangarirai Charles Dzimba

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British Council African Ministers’ Forum – Press Release

British Council African Ministers’ Forum – Press Release

27 January 2013

The British Council, Sub Sahara Africa, will host a one day Forum with several African Ministers for Education, including Minister of Education, Sport, Arts, and Culture, Senator David Coltart, to discuss globally emerging issues around the teaching of Science, Technology, English and Mathematics subjects (STEM) and its Impacts on Africa.

The theme for the British Council Africa Minister’s forum focuses on how teaching of STEM can better equip young people for the job market across Africa. They will discuss assessment of STEM to ensure that the right skills are being tested and not rote learning and what can be done to support STEM subject teachers to update

The discussions are expected to explore the best practices of STEM teaching around the British Council programmes for schools enrich education and develop 21st century skills by facilitating collaboration between schools around the world. In partnership with UKAid, British Council operates Connecting Classrooms, a programme that helps young people learn about global issues, giving them skills to work in a global economy. Connecting Classrooms is a global education programme for schools working in over 50 countries worldwide and 23 countries in Sub Sahara Africa.

The Forum will happen straight after the Educational World Forum (EWF) that takes place in London between Monday 28th and Wednesday 30th January 2013. The EWF is an internationally recognised Ministerial Forum for debating future policy and practice in education. It is sponsored by the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO), the Department of Education (DfE), the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills (BIS), the British Council and the EWF Industrial Partners. It brings together delegates from 70 countries representing 70% of the world’s population.

Former Secretary of State for Education and skills and initiator of the EWF, Charles Clarke will be joined by singer, songwriter author and education activist, Sir Bob Geldof to review the past decade of Education and give their views on the changes that need to made in the future.

 

 

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Coltart, Zimbabwe Cricket cross swords

New Zimbabwe

26 January 2013

SPORTS Minister David Coltart has accused Zimbabwe Cricket of playing politics after it rejected his directive on the appointment of national selectors.

Coltart originally wanted all national selectors to have played for the national team in their respective sport, but after a dramatic public showdown with black cricket administrators who claimed the policy was racial, the minister this week amended the directive “in the national interest”.

Instead of all the selectors having to be ex-national team players, the new directive will require that “not less than 50 percent of the selectors shall have represented Zimbabwe as athletes or players at the senior level in the particular sport discipline”.

Cricket and bowls are two of the sports that use a panel of selectors to pick the team.The amended directive says the chairman of the selectors should have played for the national team – which would require that Givemore Makoni, the convenor of selectors for the cricket national team, must give up that post because he has not played for Zimbabwe. He could still sit on the panel as part of the less than 50 percent who have not played at the highest level.

In an extraordinary show of defiance, Zimbabwe Cricket said the directive – which takes effect from February 1 – would require it to change its constitution and terminate contracts with the current selectors.

Wilfred Mukondiwa, the ZC managing director said: “In terms of the Sports and Recreation Commission Act, it does not appear that the Commission can require a national association to amend its constitution in such a manner as to determine the persons who shall take particular positions. That would appear to be micro- managing the national associations which is not consistent with the manifest tenor of the Act.

“The Act empowers the Commission to provide a hands-off oversight role except in case of a disciplinary nature. With respect therefore, it appears that the Commission has no legal capacity to require ZC to do what the directive demands.”

Stung by ZC’s open defiance, Coltart – a member of the MDC led by Welshman Ncube – accused cricket chiefs of playing politics to frustrate him.

“Can you ever imagine Zimbabwe Cricket adopting this attitude if it was a Zanu PF minister involved? Politicians are not just those who have formal political positions,” Coltart said.

Coltart and the Sports Commission appear ready to dig in, while the ZC is readying itself for a season of defiance. The ZC claims there are only 10 ex-Zimbabwe stars who qualify to sit on the panel of selectors – and a countless number of white ex-stars. The accusation is that Coltart’s directive is designed to benefit white former players and crowd out blacks.

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Coltart’s directive racist, illegal, barbaric

The Sunday Mail

By Jonathan Moyo

26 January 2013

David Coltart, the Minister of Education, Sport, Arts and Culture, wrongly deployed to that key role by Welshman Ncube’s MDC, just does not get it. His not-so-cleverly-hidden commitment to the Rhodesian racist cause has finally come out of the bag, leaving his human rights and rule of law charade up in stinking smoke.

The irrefutable evidence is now there for all to see from Coltart’s manifestly racist, illegal and even barbaric ministerial directive which he has fraudulently issued in the false name of the Sports and Recreation Commission (SRC) to the effect that from February 1 no person shall be appointed as a selector by any national sport association for a national team unless they have represented Zimbabwe in that particular sport.

The fact that Coltart’s directive smacks of sickening and intolerable racism last seen in Rhodesia has already been made beyond rational disputation not least by Givemore Makoni, a true son of the soil who is currently Zimbabwe Cricket’s Convenor of Selectors with a solid 26 years of professional experience in the troubled sport of cricket behind him.  Indeed, well experienced and respected sports journalists such as Robson Sharuko, Lawrence Moyo and Kevin Mapasure, among others, have made telling media interventions that have raised questions which Coltart has failed to convincingly answer about the racist implications of his misplaced directive.

While the racism behind Coltart’s directive is now common cause, there are three equally damning aspects of the directive that have not been sufficiently interrogated yet each and all of them expose Coltart for the fake human rights and rule of law activist that he is.
In the first place Coltart issued his directive in a fraudulent manner under the false name of the SRC.

This is because the commission does not have a board to formulate and implement the purported directive. A perusal of the record shows that the term of the previous board of the commission expired on October 31 2012 and there has been no replacement.  Where there’s no board there can be no directive.

In an emotionally charged response to an article written by Kevin Mapasure last Friday Coltart revealingly wrote that, “The SRC directive by Col Nhemachena I sent to him last week states clearly that my proposal to the SRC was sent by me to the SRC on December 3 last year”.

This shows that, in the absence of an SRC Board, Coltart has been abusing Col Nhemachena by making him do unlawful things that he has no power or authority to do in terms of the law.

The fact that Nhemachena has obliged is a total shame. As such, the purported directive sent on January 8 in Col Nhemachena’s name and under his signature on Coltart’s instruction is a fraudulent piece of paper not worth the ink printed on it.

In the second place, the fraudulent directive issued by Coltart through Col Nhemachena is barbaric in that it targets incumbents like Givemore Makoni and seeks to use the backdoor to remove them from their legal, legitimate and contractual roles and obligations by the stroke of a racist pen through a fraudulent decree purporting to be coming from a board that does not in fact exist at law. That is jungle stuff typical of Rhodie antics with no basis in the rule of law.

It is an established human rights principle and a tenet of international best practice that the effect of a change of law or rule must not be retroactive.

Givemore Makoni was legally and thus contractually appointed as Convenor of Selectors on November 2 2012 by Zimbabwe Cricket well before Coltart sent his fraudulent directive to Col Nhemachena on December 3 2012 and it is barbaric for Coltart or anyone else to seek to shamelessly nullify that appointment through a racist decree which is intended to take effect from February 1 for a specific hidden reason that is too apparent.

In the third place, and above everything else, Coltart’s directive fraudulently issued through Col Nhemachena in the absence of an SRC Board in order to unleash barbaric consequences on targeted individuals such as Givemore Makoni is patently illegal. There is absolutely nothing in the Sports and Recreation Commission Act (Chapter 25:15) that gives either Coltart as the Minister or the SRC Board the power to do what Coltart’s racist directive seeks to do.

In simple terms, while the SRC has the policy duty and responsibility to oversee the affairs of sporting associations in order to co-ordinate and develop sport at the national level, it has no legal right whatsoever to run the affairs of the associations or to make or amend their constitutions through directives.

As a matter of fact, in all situations where the law gives a minister or board any “power”, that power is always specifically defined and is always exercised in statutory terms by first being gazetted in the Government Gazette.  In terms of the law, power cannot be exercised arbitrarily or in general and nebulous terms at the whim and caprice of a minister without reference to a specific section of the enabling law and without gazetting the desired action on the basis of that law.

The fact that Coltart is a lawyer and therefore should know this is enough to prove his sinister intentions because no self-respecting lawyer would seek to implement an arbitrary directive that has no legal basis and that does not even have Cabinet authority.
What is particularly shocking in this case is that Coltart is seeking to use an ungazetted and fraudulent directive to amend the constitutions of sport associations such as Zimbabwe Cricket that are legally registered with the SRC.

This alone shows that Coltart is a fake human rights activist and the noises he always makes — especially at international fora where he is now seeking a job at some international anti-nuclear proliferation agency — are hollow and self-serving.
Against this background the position taken by Zimbabwe Cricket should be commended and supported by all Zimbabweans beyond cricket because it is legally and morally correct and is in the national interest.

Instructively, the fact that there’s a not-so-hidden racist agenda in Coltart’s directive has been exposed by his outrageous response to the decision by Zimbabwe Cricket not to implement the illegal directive. Upon learning of the Zimbabwe Cricket decision last Friday, Coltart took to the social media with a post that made this shocking claim:

“I see that one of the reasons for defiance advanced by Zimbabwe Cricket is the following: ‘Further, the actions of the Commission, in that regard, would be in violation of Article 2.9(B) of the ICC Articles of Association which prohibit government interference in the management of the affairs of the member associations’. This is one of the most disingenuous arguments I have seen. I wonder how Zimbabwe Cricket reconciles this statement with the following article published yesterday regarding Sri Lanka’s selection procedures where the Sri Lankan Minister of Sport chooses the selectors”.

It is bad for Coltart to base his response on a secondary reason used by Zimbabwe Cricket and worse for him to misrepresent that reason in a manner that clearly shows that he takes Zimbabweans for fools.

Zimbabwe Cricket’s rejection of Coltart’s directive is primarily and essentially based on the law of the land and Coltart knows that because it is in black and white in the five-page letter Zimbabwe Cricket sent to the Col Nhemachena on January 24.   Except for only one paragraph in its conclusion, the entire five-page letter is based on the Sports and Recreation Commission Act (Chapter 25:15) and painstakingly shows how and why Coltart’s directive is illegal in terms of this law and this alone.

Coltart’s failure to respond to the detailed legal issues raised by Zimbabwe Cricket in terms of the Sports and Recreation Commission Act and his uninformed reference to a useless newspaper article about how the Sri Lankan Minister of Sport chooses selectors show how childish and irresponsible he has become in defence of his racism in sport.

Zimbabwe Cricket’s reference to Article 2.9(B) of the ICC Articles of Association which prohibit government interference in the management of the affairs of member associations is an important and relevant secondary and not primary reason for rejecting Coltart’s illegal directive. The primary reason is the Zimbabwean law.

What is as shocking as it is revealing is that Coltart, who is a lawyer, wants Zimbabweans to ignore the fact that Article 2.9(B) of the ICC Articles of Association does indeed exist and wants them to focus instead on the fact that Sri Lankan and Pakistan cricket are in violation of this ICC Article 2.9(b) of Association and that this violation somehow justifies his illegal directive.

In other words, Coltart is saying “if Sri Lanka and Pakistan are doing it illegally, then we must also did it illegally”. This is utter crap which shows that Coltart does not get it and is an enemy of the rule of law. His shocking irrationality is equivalent to a stupid lawyer who defends a client accused of murder by submitting that his client must be left alone to murder some more because there are other murderers out there going scott free.

The fact is that the ICC stands by Article 2.9(b) of its Articles of Association and has given Sri Lanka and Pakistan a reprieve and is closely working with them to comply while Zimbabwe Cricket is already in compliance which partly explains why it has rejected Coltart’s illegal directive.

Another example of Coltart’s failure to understand the compelling legal issues raised by Zimbabwe Cricket was exposed last Friday in his Facebook exchange with Darlington Tendai Majonga whom he sought to confuse if not smear by rhetorically asking: “Can you ever imagine Zimbabwe Cricket adopting this attitude if it was a Zanu-PF minister involved?”

Again and because he has no case besides his racist agenda, Coltart failed to give Majonga the legal basis or reasons why Zimbabwe Cricket should comply with his racist directive and instead — and rather foolishly — decided to go political in very personalised terms by claiming that “Zimbabwe Cricket would not insist on following the law if it was a Zanu-PF minister involved”.

This again shows that Coltart does not get it. No Zanu-PF minister would treacherously dare seek to reverse the gains of our hard-won and heroic independence by giving a directive intended to disempower the indigenous population in favour of erstwhile Rhodesian interests. That is unthinkable.

It appears from the record that Coltart suffers from an acute case of delusions of the grandeur.

He imagines himself to be a champion of human rights and the rule of law only by dint of the white colour of his skin simply because his race easily and readily connects him to Western interests and that gives him an exaggerated sense of a superiority complex.

By his own admission posted on his personal website, Coltart claims to have become a human rights activist for the first time in his life in 1983 yet he was born in 1957. But interestingly he claims in his curriculum vitae that he was “conscripted into the British South African Police Force stationed in Mashonaland, Matabeleland South and Masvingo Provinces” during the height of Zimbabwe’s liberation struggle between 1975 and 1978. Although he claims that he was “conscripted” into the Rhodesian Selous Scouts network under the BSAP he boasts in his curriculum vitae that he was judged to be the “best recruit” in July 1975. Best recruit!

It is unthinkable that an unwilling soldier of conscience in Rhodesia could have been the best recruit. There’s clearly more to Coltart’s Rhodesian history than the people have known and his recent racist directive is a telling window into his dark past.
This perhaps explains why there’s nothing in Coltart’s history that locates him in support of Zimbabwe’s liberation struggle or its legacy.  Nothing

According to his own curriculum vitae posted on his personal Website he became a human rights activist not by choice or God’s calling as he would have the uninitiated among us believe but after he was “instructed by the Catholic Commission for Justice and Peace to record affidavits from people who had suffered at the hands of the Fifth Brigade, affidavits subsequently submitted to the Chihambakwe Commission of Inquiry”.

Coltart prepared these affidavits not as a human rights activist — which he has never been — but as a hired lawyer under instruction from Rhodesian interests! The same is true with his legal defence of the likes of the late Sydney Malunga, Edward Ndlovu, Stephen Nkomo and other members of the then PF-Zapu Central Committee. Coltart defended them as a hired lawyer and not as a human rights activist not least because he did not support their heroic liberation history or role in that struggle.

He just supported their unfortunate misunderstanding with their nationalist colleagues in Government. And to this day Coltart does not support the liberation struggle or its gains. This is because to him human rights and the rule of law are the antithesis of the liberation struggle and its gains.

It is for this reason that Coltart cannot stand the likes of Givemore Makoni whose rise in cricket is an expression of the gains of the liberation struggle.

Indeed, Coltart’s opposition to the liberation struggle and its gains also explains why more often than not on a given day in his Government ministerial office, he is wont to be found surrounded by hordes of Rhodies. In the same vein, his policy thrust as education minister is run by a so-called Education Transition Trust which meets once a month at his ministerial offices and whose composition is 70 percent white with the 30 percent remainder made up of the black employees of the same 70 percent white bloc that runs the trust plus a sprinkling of a few ministry officials.

Under Coltart, the last four years have seen a concerted effort to kill the very system of public education that has been Zimbabwe’s national pride by not only privatising it but also by creating white colonies within it that are reminiscent of the Rhodesian “Group A” schools that are now once again springing up as colonies in our country.

As part of Coltart’s racist initiative in education, these schools are running their own foreign syllabi and have become apartheid islands that are not relating to the rest of the schools in the public educational system even in sports and recreational activities.
Coltart has a dangerous racist agenda which he is pursuing with his racist cabal of Rhodies in a fraudulent manner with no legal basis. He must be stopped by any and all means necessary.

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