Twitter Weekly Updates for 2011-07-24

  • Encouraged by Zimbabwe's performance against Australia A – 10 of Aus team have played for Aus test side and we are missing 5 key players #
  • Waiting for news on Zimbabwe's World Cup final match against Australia in polocrosse in UK today – any news out there? #
  • Enjoyable evening with Australia A cricket team – nice to hear Greg Chappell being highly complementary about Zimbabwe cricket #
  • “@zimcricket: Word is that Taylor and Taibu will be back from injury for Zim.” Taylor yes but not Taibu – remaining concerns re thumb #
  • " I hope God will help us as these people are busy working for Satan" Bingu wa Mutharika Malawian President – talks today about protesters #
  • Malawian President says those protesting are working for Satan – see full speech at http://t.co/oMMuNaC #
  • Check this video out — Hon. Mr David Coltart, Minister for Education, Sports, Arts & Culture Zi… http://t.co/tBrUN4n via @youtube #
  • Come on Zimbabwe – time for a few wickets #
  • I am shocked and deeply saddened by the Norwegian tragedy – I remember their wonderful generosity to Zimbabwe's Education Transition Fund #
  • Good to see Ray Price getting back into form – great figures Pricey against the Australians #
  • Much better day at the office Zimbabwe – now get these last two Australian wickets! #
  • Ray Price – you beauty! Great figures – just missed out on his 5 against Australia today. Good to see you back in the thick of it #
  • Ray Price – all rounder deluxe! #
  • Disappointing end to Australia A series with Zim collapsing but there are many positives to take us forward – thank you Australia! #

Posted in Blog | Leave a comment

Foes drag Zimbabwe back from the brink

The Australian

By Bruce Loudon

23 July 2011

IT’S about the last thing you would expect him to be, but David Coltart is an optimist. After more than 30 years fighting for human rights and democracy in Zimbabwe, constantly locking horns with Robert Mugabe and defying the worst Mugabe’s brutal regime could throw at him, including death threats, it would be no surprise to find him in despair.

But he’s not: far from it. And as he provides rare insights into what it’s like these days to be both a committed opponent and member of Mugabe’s cabinet under the power-sharing arrangement that governs the country, Coltart – Minister for Education, Sport, Arts and Culture, and political fighter extraordinaire – is dismissive of the doomsayers.

“Look,” he says, “I’m under absolutely no illusions. This [power-sharing arrangement, which has brought members of Coltart’s Movement for Democratic Change opposition into government alongside Mugabe’s ruling ZANU-PF party] is a very fragile set-up. Anything could happen. But at the moment it’s working. We will inevitably go through more upsets. But things have at least stabilised.”

And he says – remarkably, given his chequered past relations with him – that although Mugabe is 87 and seen by many to be on his last legs, possibly suffering prostate cancer, “anyone who is contemplating the future of Zimbabwe on the basis that Mugabe is not going to be around for very long is making a mistake”.

“No, Mugabe is no monster,” he says emphatically when I ask about the notorious reputation of the man who has held Zimbabwe in his thrall for 31 years. “He is no Idi Amin. Yes, he’s 87 and, yes, he may tire quickly. But he remains a wily political operator. He’s remarkably fit, remarkably fit. He’s lucid.”

Despite his decades of indefatigable opposition to Mugabe’s despotic rule Coltart speaks almost generously of the old man’s efficient management of cabinet meetings, of the extent to which, despite expectations to the contrary, he retains tight control over government – in Coltart’s case, taking keen interest in his education portfolio and supporting his initiatives against others in government.

We are speaking on the eve of Coltart’s departure for Sydney. On Tuesday he will speak on politics and religion at a meeting in the NSW parliament organised by the Centre for Independent Studies. For those seeking insight into Zimbabwe and Mugabe, there could hardly be a better source, for Coltart, a 54-year-old white lawyer and committed Christian, has been fighting for justice in Zimbabwe since Ian Smith’s time.

In the 1980s Coltart played a key role in uncovering the Gukurahundi massacres carried out in Matabeleland by Mugabe’s North Korean-trained Fifth Brigade, acts of genocide that remain among the worst atrocities committed by the regime.

“No, Mugabe is not Idi Amin,” says Coltart, a senator whose nomination as education minister was initially forcefully opposed by Mugabe. “But he and ZANU-PF are responsible for some terrible things that can never be forgotten. He’s not a monster but he is a very, very complex man,” he says, echoing a widely held view that many of Mugabe’s excesses stem from what he suffered decades ago under white rule, one instance being when his three-year-old son died and Mugabe, then in prison, was not permitted to attend his funeral.

What about Mugabe’s religion, I ask. Wasn’t he reared a devout Catholic and educated by Jesuits? How does someone with that background gain such notoriety as a tyrant? Is he still so religious?

“Not noticeably,” Coltart says. “But it’s all part of the complex person that he is.”

He recalls how last year when Coltart’s daughter had a serious accident, Mugabe went to great lengths to inquire about her welfare, despite their longstanding political animus.

It is in this mood of co-operation, fragile though it is, that lies the real cause for Coltart’s optimism. Despite the doomsayers and extremist factions within ZANU-PF who are seeking to undermine it, the power-sharing government, he says, is working reasonably well and, importantly, gaining public support.

“In 2008, when the power-sharing deal was done, Zimbabwe was facing total collapse. There was hyperinflation, a cholera epidemic, a collapsed economy, rioting by soldiers, real prospects that Zimbabwe would disintegrate,” Coltart says.

“It’s not a perfect arrangement. Far from it. But it has stabilised the economy.

“There are far fewer human rights abuses than there used to be. Dramatically fewer. Fewer people are being murdered.

“This isn’t Somalia. There is an inherent strength in Zimbabwe. We have rich natural resources. Geographically, we are in the heart of Africa, something that makes what happens in our country important to the whole region.

“We’re making progress. It’s not perfect. But gradually, step by step, we’re getting there. Yes, I am an optimist, if a cautious optimist, but I’m a realist, too.”

Coltart puts Zimbabwe about where South Africa was in the 1990s, before Nelson Mandela’s release and the advent of democratic rule. Importantly, he says, the power-sharing arrangement, as it inches forwards, is winning backers even among elements in the army and police that are hardline supporters of ZANU-PF.

So, what happens now? What about Mugabe’s reported determination to force another election this year before a new constitution can be drawn up that will ensure free and fair elections, and in that way grab another five years in power?

Coltart has no doubt that if free and fair elections are held the opposition will be swept into office. That’s why ZANU-PF wants a new poll now. But South Africa’s President Jacob Zuma and the South African Development Community group of nations he leads have made it plain they won’t countenance such undermining of the power-sharing arrangement. They’re determined to ensure there is no election before a new constitution is in place.

So what about sanctions? And what happens after Mugabe?

On sanctions, Coltart declares himself a sceptic and a cynic. They simply don’t work, he insists. Just as they didn’t when Smith declared independence.

He points out that despite atrocities such as the Gukurahundi massacres, Mugabe was awarded a knighthood by Britain in 1994, becoming a Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath. By contrast, after 15 white farmers were killed by ZANU-PF mobs in 2000 sanctions were imposed.

There is, he says, no clear line of succession from Mugabe. ZANU-PF, he maintains, is not a homogeneous body. It has rival factions. There would be a battle for the leadership. Coltart says he is aware of reports that the army, a notorious mainstay of the regime, is preparing to impose its chief, General Constantine Chiwenga, as leader, but says he believes this would be opposed by elements within ZANU-PF.

Coltart’s message is that Zimbabwe has come back from the brink, that it is no longer headed towards the sort of trainwreck that has been seen in places such as Somalia. Equally, the message is also that a nation that has been ravaged by decades of Mugabe’s misrule has got a long way to go before it returns to the prosperity it once enjoyed and that was the envy of Africa.

That Coltart, indefatigable campaigner for human rights and democracy, and Mugabe, the notorious tyrant, can work together is at least a promising sign in a country in which there has been so little hope for so long.

The CIS Acton lecture on religion and freedom is next Tuesday at NSW parliament, 5.45pm-7pm.

 

 


Posted in Blog | Leave a comment

Asiagate: Any need for threats?

Newsday

Sport Comment

22 July 2011

Football in Zimbabwe cannot be a matter of life and death. Certainly not.

We find it strange some people would want to target one member of the Zifa investigating committee in the Asiagate match-fixing scandal and single him out as somebody who has put their lives at risk.

The committee has four members — Ndumiso Gumede, Eliot Kasu, Benedict Moyo and Fungai Chihuri — appointed by the current Zifa Board to look at the issue of match-fixing that rocked Zimbabwe since 2007 following numerous trips to Asia.

Why would one person, or a group of persons, threaten Moyo?

Was it because he was the secretary of the committee or was it just personal hatred?

The document has been dismissed as having flaws because the interviews were not conducted under oath and even the Education, Sport, Arts and Culture minister David Coltart has admitted the porous document would be difficult to use to arrest and prosecute people.

Former Zifa chief executive Henrietta Rushwaya said if people have evidence a crime was committed, they should testify in a court of law.

Other accused like Godfrey Japajapa, Methembe Ndlovu, Luke Masomere, Kudzi Shaba, Nyasha Mushekwi, Method Mwanjali, Sunday Chidzambwa and Hope Chizuzu have denied some of the accusations levelled against them.

So why would one want to spend a good Saturday chasing after Moyo?

Why would one not want to spend that energy clearing his name?

See — whether a crime was committed or not, and whether people’s names have been soiled or not — the real issue lies in those with the power to make decisions.

And in this case, the Sports and Recreation Commission — under the leadership of lawyer Joseph James and its parent ministry under another lawyer, Coltart — is better placed to give the nation direction.

Coltart has already done so.

The police and Fifa, empowered by their statutes, can also take action, and Fifa president Sepp Blatter has already threatened a life ban on alleged perpetrators if found guilty.

The Parliament of Zimbabwe was on Thursday told security is needed for members of the committee, which means they took the threats against Moyo seriously.

However, Zifa president Cuthbert Dube has been silent since the release of the report.

“As we speak now one of our board members is in hiding because there are people baying for his blood. We need Parliament to assist us to have legislative support which will be foolproof in making people who deface football accountable for their mischief through the statutes.

“It will protect the game of football because without that, our game will be susceptible to the machinations of fraudsters.

“We also want assurance of security for the Asiagate investigators due to the death threats to some of our members,” Zifa chief executive officer Jonathan Mashingaidze said.

We believe it is time people put their heads together and came clean on why the attacks on the committee are centred on Gumede and Moyo only.

Are some people afraid of Kasu because he is a soldier or Chihuri because his surname sounds familiar?

A note to the Zimbabwean parliamentarians: Bulgaria’s parliament has approved legal amendments to make match-fixing and corruption in sport a crime with penalties of up to six years in prison.

Lawmakers voted on Thursday to add a whole new chapter “Offences against Sports” to the penal code under which those convicted of match-fixing or bribing would also face fines of up to $10 800.

Last year, authorities investigated allegations of match-fixing in eight football matches, but legal proceedings stumbled over lack of provision in criminal law.

The new legislation was expected to also counter illegal online betting which had gained immense popularity in the country.


 

Posted in Blog | Leave a comment

Asiagate scam

Newsday

By Veneranda Langa

22 July 2011

Zifa yesterday appealed to Parliament and the government to intervene and craft legislation that would impose deterrent sentences for match-fixers and to protect those involved in the investigations of the infamous Asiagate scam.

Zifa chief executive officer, Jonathan Mashingaidze and board member (finance) Elliot Kasu told the Parliamentary Portfolio Committee on Education, Sport, Arts and Culture chaired by Mutasa North lawmaker David Chimhini that they wanted Parliament and the government to intervene so those implicated who might want to use political clout in order to avoid the course of justice are dealt with without fear or favour. They told the committee that they had also asked Interpol to investigate the cases of match-fixing because they were twofold; those of a criminal nature and others were offences in contravention of Fifa rules and regulations.

“Asiagate is of serious concern because no sponsor will finance the sport of football where results will be determined by morally unscrupulous individuals who sacrifice patriotism for only $5 000 in this circus of madness,” said Mashingaidze.

“Espionage took place over the past four years, where these match-fixing syndromes would move in the company of the mafia and people who wanted to exploit the economic meltdown of Zimbabwe and it was easy to induce a player to make the country lose,” he said.

Mashingaidze said the post investigation process will involve prosecution of the masterminds of the scandal so that there was finality because Fifa president Sepp Blatter came to Zimbabwe and declared that all those found guilty would be banned for life.

“As we speak now, one of our board members is in hiding because there are people baying for his blood. There will also be need for psychotherapy for those players who sacrificed their psycho values for the sake of dirty money,” Mashingaidze said.

He continued: “We need Parliament to assist us to have legislative support which will be foolproof in making people who deface football accountable for their mischief through the statutes. It will protect the game of football because without that our game will be susceptible to the machinations of fraudsters. We also want assurance of security for the Asiagate investigators due to the death threats to some of our members.”

Kasu said when the new Zifa board came into office people knew that there were nefarious activities happening, but were not bold enough to crack them, resulting in a lot of cases pending from the previous board.

“These included unsanctioned trips to Asia. When we started investigating, a lot of people involved in these scandals tried to instil fear in us, but we said if football has to be sponsored, we needed to clean our house,” said Kasu.

He said the methodology used to come up with the report of the Asiagate match -fixing scandal was to interview players, the technical teams, journalists and other people involved.

Kasu said they could not manage to visit all the places involved, but some of the people interviewed gave written testimonies that were signed.

“However, there is misconstruing from the press where they think we look at the number of trips a person participated in these match fixing deals. Instead, we look at how many games a person participated in because people are trying to hide behind that,” said Kasu.

He continued: “There was no single cent that went to Zifa and it means this money was going into people’s pockets. About 80 players participated in match-fixing, including technical members, coaches, referees and even current board members,” he said.

He said $28 million had been made available to Interpol to curb international match-fixing and Zimbabwe should try to tap into that amount in its quest to put an end to match-fixing syndicates.

On Wednesday, Education, Sport, Arts and Culture minister David Coltart, while admitting flaws in the second Asiagate report, said he would call in the police and the Attorney-General to assist and assured the nation that action will certainly be taken against alleged perpetrators of the scam.


 

Posted in Blog | Leave a comment

Hon. Mr David Coltart, Minister for Education, Sports, Arts & Culture Zimbabwe – Part 2

The African Education Summit, 12-13 July, Rabat, Morocco.
Ministerial Session Day One Hosted by HP
Hon. Mr David Coltart Minister for Education, Sports, Arts & Culture Zimbabwe
Part 2 of 2

Posted in Multimedia | Leave a comment

Hon. Mr David Coltart, Minister for Education, Sports, Arts & Culture Zimbabwe – Part 1

The African Education Summit, 12-13 July, Rabat, Morocco.
Ministerial Session Day One Hosted by HP
Hon. Mr David Coltart Minister for Education, Sports, Arts & Culture Zimbabwe
Part 1 of 2

Posted in Multimedia | Leave a comment

Teaching vacancies in a land of unemployment

www.kubatanablogs.net

 21 July 2011

A recent headline in The Herald caught my eye: 15,000 teaching posts vacant.

It brought to mind a recent post I’d seen on Twitter – despite the high levels of unemployment there, an IT company was struggling to fill 20 vacancies.

In Zimbabwe, unemployment is estimated at 90%, with the majority of Zimbabweans surviving in the informal sector, and with tremendous pressure on wage earners to support large extended family networks.

Meanwhile, many of the country’s brightest and proactive young people have left the country to pursue economic opportunities in South Africa, the UK and elsewhere. The brain drain included many of Zimbabwe’s qualified teachers, who left the careers they had planned and studied for to find better paying jobs outside of the country. Despite government initiatives to lure these qualified teachers back to the country, the teaching vacancies persist.

In a country with such massive unemployment, how can 15,000 posts go vacant?

As The Herald article points out: “Most teachers have been driven away by low remuneration and frustrating bureaucracy.”

Drawing on The Herald piece, a story from VOA Studio 7 quotes Education Minister David Coltart as saying that “the lack of respect for teachers in Zimbabwe, poor housing especially at rural schools and political intimidation of teachers have all contributed to high vacancies.”

Zimbabwe used to have one of the best education systems in Africa. Other posts on this blog have talked about the esteem in which teachers were held in their communities. But now Zimbabwe is in a bind. Without a robust economic engine of production, how does the country generate the revenue base to enable government to increase teachers’ salaries (and those of other civil servants)? In the meantime, what does it say for us as a country, if conditions for those in the teaching profession are so bad that our young people would rather leave the country – or start their own businesses – than contribute to educating the future of Zimbabwe.

Posted in Blog | Leave a comment

Rare Show of Unity At Heroes Acre

Financial Gazette

21 July 2011

THE three parties in the coalition government yesterday shrugged off their political differences to attend the burial of the late national hero, Andrew Sikajaya Muntanga, at the National Heroes Acre, in a rare show of unity. Although Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai was conspicuous by his absence, some of his party officials were present at the national shrine and so were officials from the Welshman Ncube-led formation of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC).

Deputy Prime Minister Arthur Mutambara was also in attendance to bury the first legislator for Binga.

Muntanga, who was a Binga legislator from 1980 to 1985, died last week at the Medical Centre in the resort town of Victoria Falls after a long battle with heart complications.

Ministers David Coltart (MDC), Joel Gabbuza Gabuza (MDC-T), the current Binga House of Assembly member, were some of the former opposition supporters that braved the chilly weather to pay their last respect to the fallen giant from Binga.

Douglas Mwonzora, the MDC-T spokesperson, said the Prime Minister did not attend due to other pressing commitments.

“The Prime Minister did not attend; there was an (MDC-T) standing committee meeting and the party caucus, which coincided with the burial. Also we are planning for a memorial service of one of our late members, Rwisai Nyakauru where the Prime Minister is going to attend,” said Mwonzora.

In the past, the MDC formations have boycotted the burial of national heroes at the national shrine, arguing that the events were being turned into ZANU-PF private functions or political meetings at which President Robert Mugabe has on several occasions attacked his opponents.

But in a clear departure from his favourite pastime, President Mugabe shied away from attacking his partners in the shaky coalition government and the West.

In a toned down speech, President Mugabe instead heaped praises on the late nationalist, disappointing those who were anticipating his usual bashing of Prime Minister Tsvangirai, the MDC-T and the West.

In a brief mention of the Gukurahundi massacres, in his gravesite eulogy, President Mugabe said the period was nasty before brushing off the issue in which civil society organisations claim more than 20 000 people were killed in State-sponsored violence.

Posted in Blog | Leave a comment

Asiagate: The Way forward

Newsday

By Stanley Makombe

21 July 2011

The Asiagate match-fixing scandal that has been unearthed by the new Zifa administration is indeed a milestone achievement in bringing sanity to local football.

I must applaud the new administration for taking this stance which is not usually easy. They have lived up to the saying “new brooms sweep clean”.

It will breathe new life into the manner our football is administered by changing the mindset of local administrators while instilling confidence in sponsors.

However, in the midst of all these positive comments also comes questions whether the new administration is not going to lose focus in their day-to-day business and most importantly, on a strategy that counters the causes of such misdemeanours.

I am not qualified to go deeper into the Asiagate scandal itself and my comments are largely going to touch on what l believe is the way forward for the new administration.

I believe that it is paramount for the new administration to simultaneously invest their energies in a commercialisation model which attracts partners that pour money into the system.

The strategy must have a fourfold magnitude in drive, depth and publicity in order to redirect stakeholders’ and supporters’ perception about the business of the new administration and their vision. I think you will all agree with me that the causes of all these scandals are clear for all to see.

With the football association always broke, it goes without saying that most staff members who are employed in football associations in Africa are not paid enough and the temptation of using their office to make money to survive is ever-present.

In real terms the commercialisation approach will seek to manage football as a profit entity, to secure funding for the association.

South Africa managed to adopt a commercialisation model that makes it the richest league in Africa, making it possible for them to attract the best players from Africa and even a few players from Europe.

This is not an event but a process that requires commitment and consistency in order to reap the rewards.

Central to a commercialisation model is the association’s realisation that they are not just managing football, but a brand that attracts sponsors whose interest is to sell their brands using football.

This realisation is very key to understand as it naturally instils discipline and plants a seed of accountability in the actions of the association.

The association should constantly be aware that it may cost them to lose partners who pour money into funding their structures and budgets.

This is very important to know as many football institutions seem to always think that sponsors are donors!

No, they are not donors as they only provide funds from their marketing budgets to promote their brands to their targeted markets, which means they have set objectives which must be achieved after the sponsorship.

Sponsors always find it easy and acceptable to sponsor institutions with proper management structures as compared to one- man-band organisations.

If there is a sound structure, then issues of budgets naturally come into play.

The benefits of employing experienced and qualified staff that I alluded to earlier becomes relevant as the so-called football greats may not have the knowhow to professionally handle such matters.

It is for this reason that today in Zimbabwe cricket, tennis and rugby attract bigger multi-sectoral sponsorship deals as they employ professional staff who can present convincing sponsorship proposals.

The football association can secure funding through selling their TV rights, touchline advertising rights, the Warriors brand, royalties on shirt sales, gate takings and sponsorship income.

Commercialisation was adopted long ago in Europe, Asia, South America, Australia and in African countries such as South Africa and Egypt.

Within the last few years Nigeria, Cameroon, Ghana, Liberia, Kenya and Zambia have also joined the bandwagon of commercialising football.

Local football has been like a woman who has been pregnant for three years and still can’t give birth.

Our local talent is too good to play for passion only while other countries like South Africa make big money out of our talent.

I believe this is the opportune time to deal with this ghost that has been hounding our football for so long at a time when the Ministry of Education, Sport, Arts and Culture is agreeing to deal with the challenge of local authorities charging 20% of gate takings.

It is the opportune time when the responsible minister, David Coltart, has scheduled a football indaba following the recent visit by Fifa President Joseph Sepp Blatter to brainstorm on why local football cannot make profit.

Indeed, it is the most appropriate time when our women’s national team recently did us proud by winning the Cosafa Trophy after which President Robert Mugabe confirmed that the government needs to do more for local sports.

Surely, there is no special reason why the Zambian and Kenyan football leagues would attract SuperSport coverage ahead of ours when we have more talent.

I do believe commercialisation can indeed inject lifeblood into local football and benefit the national football association, clubs, officials and even the supporters.

In a match situation, coaches believe that the best way to defend is by attacking and I also believe the best way to deal with the causes of match-fixing after successfully exposing the scandals is by way of commercialising the game.

 

Stanley Makombe is a sports consultant with New Century Associates Email: stanley@newcenturyassociates.biz

Posted in Blog | Leave a comment

The Annual Acton Lecture on Religion & Freedom

Centre for Independent Studies

Sydney

20 July 2011

Senator David Coltart
Minister of Education, Sport, Arts and Culture, Zimbabwe

Tuesday, 26 July 2011, 5:30pm for 5:45pm – 7:00pm
Parliament House, Parliament of NSW 
Macquarie St, Sydney 
Members – free, Non-Members – $15 / inc. GST

Reservations are essential. Places must be paid for in advance. Seats are transferable but non-refundable. We expect interest in this event to be high so please book early to avoid disappointment. Click here for more information or to register, or call (02) 9438 4377. For media enquiries please email CIS Media Manager, Jessica Kostera. For event enquiries, please email office@cis.org.au


Posted in Blog | Leave a comment