Hold horses on school condoms – Coltart

Newsday

By Fortune Moyo

24 June 2011

Education minister David Coltart has declared distribution of condoms in schools will not take place until government was satisfied with the programme.

On Monday, the National Aids Council (NAC) said it was proposing amendments to a number of laws that could see the distribution of condoms at schools as a way of fighting the HIV/Aids scourge.

In an interview yesterday, Coltart said he has not been approached by NAC on the issue.

“I have heard that there have been such reports, but I have not been approached by NAC on the matter,” he said.

“This is a policy matter and until I have given my approval, such a programme cannot take place.” Coltart said there was need to carry out consultations on the matter.

“This is a matter which will need us to carry out some consultations before implementation,” he said.

“I am actually surprised that this has been brought forward without anyone consulting me as the minister in charge of Education.”

The law which NAC wants amended is the Zimbabwe National Family Planning Council Act. It provides for the structure, functions and powers of ZNFPC, which include child spacing and fertility services, promotion and implementation of primary healthcare.

However, NAC wants that Act amended so that, “contraceptives be made readily available in schools . . . stipulating placing of condoms in hotels, nightclubs and lodges”.

The recommendations were made by a consultant hired to review HIV/Aids policies in Zimbabwe with a view of harmonising them.

If the proposals are accepted, Zimbabwe will be following in the footsteps of South Africa, which in 2007 introduced the Children’s Act that gives children who are 12 years and above the right to access contraceptives.

An estimated 1,2 million Zimbabweans, including 145 225 children live with HIV/Aids.

Although the adult prevalence rate has declined to 13, 1%, it still remains one of the highest in the world


 

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Hockey preparations intensify

Newsday

23 June 2011

The Zimbabwe men’s hockey team coach Bill Birkett Wednesday hailed the renewed interest in the sport as the country prepares to host the Africa Olympic Games qualifiers set for Bulawayo in September.

Government and the Zimbabwe Olympic Committee through the Olympic Solidarity funding have been trying to revive the sport.

“These are exciting times in local hockey. I haven’t been excited like this about the local sport in ten years, but that has all changed as we are preparing for the Africa Olympic qualifiers.

“It all started with the government pledging support in the relaying of astro turf at Khumalo and I’m happy with the progress that has taken place so far.

“The Zimbabwe Olympic Committee also secured funding for the team through the Olympic Solidarity program which is a huge boost for our preparations,” said Birkett.

Birkett who is also a technical expert will team up with Pakistani coaching expert KM Awais to conduct a technical course for 20 local coaches at the Olympic Sports Center at Prince Edward from June 25-July 22.

The course is being funded by the Olympic Solidarity to the tune of $10 000.00.

The Zimbabwe Olympic Committee last month secured US$45 000 from the Olympic Solidarity to support the Zimbabwe senior men’s hockey team.

The funds will be channeled specifically towards the hockey team’s preparations for the Olympic Games qualifiers.This was a bold step towards ensuring that Zimbabwe qualifies a team sport to the Olympics for the first time since 1980 when the women’s hockey team won a gold medal.

The Minister of Education, Sports and Culture David Coltart, made a passionate appeal to cabinet for the release of the 1 million dollars which was needed for the refurbishment of Khumalo Hockey Stadium in Bulawayo.

____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Zimbabwe to Host 2nd African Olympic Qualifier

The Hockey Association is preparing feverishly to host the second African Olympic Qualifier in Bulawayo during the period September 2-11, 2011. The Government of Zimbabwe is therefore rehabilitating the Khumalo Stadium and replacing the old turf with a modern, state of the art and environementally friendly one. A Press Release from the Local Organising Committee indicate some good progress being made.

 

 

 

HOCKEY ASSOCIATION OF ZIMBABWE

PRESS RELEASE

KHUMALO HOCKEY STADIUM, BULAWAYO

 

The Khumalo Hockey Stadium was built in 1994 to host the Africa Games in 1995. That event was an outstanding success, due in no part to the excellent facilities. The stadium, at its prime, ranked amongst the best such facilities globally, and the President of the International Hockey Federation, Mrs Els Van Breda Vriesman, during a visit to mark the centenary of hockey in Zimbabwe in 2000, noted that Bulawayo was an ideal venue for hosting international tournaments.

 

During this period, the facility was attracting more international sportsmen and women, of all ages, than any other sporting facility in Bulawayo. Far from being a white elephant, as many had predicted, it was a facility that was put to good use by both adults and school children. Sadly after 2003 the stadium fell into disuse as the artificial carpet approached the end of its useful life, and no hockey was played there after 2005.

 

The Hockey Association of Zimbabwe is pleased to advise that on 31 May 2011 a contract was signed in Harare for the replacement of the artificial turf. The chosen supplier is Edelgrass based in The Netherlands;  Edelgrass provided the original turf in 1994, but new technology has allowed them to supply an enhanced product for the Khumalo Hockey Stadium – returning it to one of the top hockey facilities globally. Taking into account the City’s water concerns, the new “B” field will require no water to play on, whilst the new “A” field will require about 50% less than that previously used. In this way the KHS has reduced water consumption to 25% of the previous amounts – a considerable boost to the environment and the City. The new turf left the manufacturer on 9th June and is due in Bulawayo on the 16th July, with completion two weeks later.

 

Part of the motivation for the repair of the stadium was the hosting by the Hockey Association of Zimbabwe of a major International Hockey Tournament, and the Africa Hockey Federation awarded Zimbabwe the right to host the Africa Olympic Qualifier in September 2011. The last major event hosted at the Khumalo Hockey Stadium was the Africa Cup of Nations in 2000. The hosting of this Olympic Qualifier is a major boost to not only Bulawayo, but to Zimbabwe as a whole.

 

In addition to this event Zimbabwe will host the Southern African Three Nations Tournament in late August. This annual event brings together teams from U/14, U/16, U/18 and open from Namibia and Botswana. In mid-August the Inter-provincial Tournament will be played at the KHS.

 

At the same time the Congress of the African Hockey Federation will be held in Bulawayo. These three events will bring much needed activity to our city hotels and boost the image of the City. Teams and delegates will arrive at the new JM Nkomo airport and play at a newly revamped stadium.

 

The repair to the field irrigation system, the roof and other parts of the stadium are now moving forward. However, since that date, a team of volunteers has been active at the stadium clearing and cleaning, and have enjoyed resounding support from the City of Bulawayo.

 

Please contact either Mr James Watson, Marketing Manager, Africa Olympic Qualifier, Local Organising Committee (AOQ-LOC) on 0713 608 238 or mhb.projects@gmail.comThis e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it , or the Matabeleland Hockey Board (President, Mr R Kendall-Ball 263 772 126 755 ) or  the Hockey Association of Zimbabwe (President Mr K Kanyangara 263 773 430 470) for more information.

 

The Official Host of the Tournament is the Hockey Association of Zimbabwe, but the Matabeleland Hockey Board, as the local host, is embarking on various efforts to make this a success and showpiece for Bulawayo and Zimbabwe.

 


 

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Textbooks Not for Sale -David Coltart

Zimbabwe Community Radio http://www.zicora.com/

22 June 2011

Education, arts, sport and culture minister David Coltart says his ministry will tighten monitoring measures on the textbooks that were distributed to all primary schools.

Speaking to Zimbabwe Community Radio, Coltart said his ministry has received a number of reports that some schools are illegally selling the textbooks.

“These books are government property, we made it very clear that these textbook are not for resale, if parents would read what is printed on them, it is specified they are not to be sold,” he said. “If there is any attempts to sell those, that will be a criminal offence”

He added that there is a law of theft which ensures that such government property is not tempered with as this is a gift from UNICEF.

“There is no market for those who sell the books because every child now has their own textbook, so where are they going to be sold.”

The minister encouraged parents to refuse to buy text books and said schools received text books in English, Mathematics, Environmental Science and indigenous language and there is no need for parents to be buying textbooks.He however encouraged parents to buy text books which were not covered by the program.

Last year the United Nations International Children’s Emergency Fund UNICEF unveiled a US$70 million programme aimed at providing a text book for every child in the country’s 5,300 primary schools within 12 months. It is being funded by Australia, New Zealand and European nations.


 

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Moyo threatens security mayhem over poll roadmap

Zimbabwean

22 June 2011

By Vusimusi Bhebhe

Desperate Zanu (PF) hardliners could be forced to assassinate a high-profile figure in order to justify the holding of elections this year, Education Minister David Coltart warned this week as a key ally of embattled President Robert Mugabe threatened that “all hell will break loose” over a poll roadmap being spearheaded by SADC.

Addressing law students at the University of Cape Town, Coltart said the situation in Zimbabwe was very fragile. He warned that cornered Zanu (PF) hardliners would stop at nothing in their attempt to force an election this year, including the possibility of staging an assassination of a senior political figure in order to create chaos and trigger a state of emergency.

“There is no guarantee of a happy ending… There are hardliners trying to subvert the status quo – those behind the increasing violence seen this year – and they could be pushed to the assassination of a high-profile person in order to ensure an election this year while Mugabe can be its figurehead,” said Coltart.

He did not say which high-profile individual could be targeted for assassination although previous reports have hinted at a plot by Zanu (PF) hardliners to kill Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai.

Other reports have cited key Tsvangirai ally and Zimbabwe’s Finance Minister Tendai Biti as another possible target for assassination by Zanu (PF)-aligned security forces.

Coltart’s fears were confirmed this week when Zanu (PF) chief propagandist Jonathan Moyo threatened that “all hell will break loose” unless South African mediators shelve the proposed roadmap to guide the conduct of Zimbabwe’s next polls.

 

Coltart’s note:

This is a distortion of what I actually said when I spoke at UCT on the 19th May 2011 (see my post of the summary of the speech posted on that day). I was speaking in the context of Chris Hani’s assassination in South Africa in the early 1990s and simply said that the same scenario was possible in Zimbabwe. I have no intelligence of any such plot today but ti remains a possibility that some of the hardliners who are determined to break the GPA could resort to extreme measures.


 

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Victoria High in bad state – Coltart

http://www.masvingomirror.co.zw/

21 June 2011

By Charity Munaki

The Minister of Education, Sports and Culture David Coltart this week visited the Government owned Victoria High School amid complaints from parents and students that conditions had gone down.

He agreed that conditions had become appalling.

Coltart said during the visit that, “I have come to see the state of the school and to address students and parents on the concerns. I cannot disagree with what is being said because the school is in a bad state.

“Students are overcrowded, boarding facilities have deteriorating and there is poor supply of water and a pathetic ablution.”

“We now have donors coming to assist with text books for O’ level core subjects. “We are just about to issue out millions of text books so that by the end of the year we will have one textbook per student system and we want to thank UNICEF for that.”

“A survey we conducted on Victoria shows that the school needs thousands of dollars to get back to the old Victoria High and I promise that we are doing something but would warn that the rehabilitation will take a bit long,” he said.

 

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Workers to strike over salaries as Ministers get luxury cars

http://www.theafricareport.com/

20 June 2011

State workers in Zimbabwe are up in arms against the government over salaries after it emerged that 140 top-of-the-range American cars had been acquired for ministers and top officials.

With more than 200 000 Zimbabwean workers earning between US$150 and US$200 per month, unions in the southern African country have begun pressing for a doubling of salaries,.

But their request to have salaries raised to above the poverty datum line, estimated at US$502, has been met by government intransigence as Finance Minister, Tendai Biti, while meeting workers at a gathering in Gweru argued that government is already spending about 70 percent of the country’s revenue on wages and that government coffers are empty.

However, two weeks ago, government’s vehicle procurement  company, Central Mechanical Engineering Department (CMED) took delivery of 40,2110 Limited Edition Jeep Grand Cherokees for cabinet ministers, 40 Land Cruisers V8 SUVs for deputy ministers and 50 Prados for permanent secretaries.

While the price tag of a Jeep Grand Cherokee is estimated at around US$35 000 Biti insists that “There is no money. Revenue collections are going down. In March we collected US$213 million, US$184 million in April and US$164 million in May”.

This comes after a promise by President Robert Mugabe, indicating that workers would get a hike in June, raised expectations among civil servants. And Progressive Teachers Union of Zimbabwe secretary general, Raymond Majongwe, on Monday announced that members were still waiting for confirmation on Tuesday on their bank accounts.

“We have said it categorically, if there is no change we will definitely strike because we have suffered for so long,” said Majongwe.

At the inception of the fragile government in 2009, ministers, with the exception of education minister – David Coltart – who refused the expensive vehicles, were awarded with the latest Mercedes Benz among other incentives.

Meanwhile, The International Monetary Fund has said that Zimbabwe, which owes foreign lenders some US$7 billion, cannot afford increased salaries.


 

 

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Learn-now-pay-later unsustainable

Herald

by Daniel Nemukuyu

20 June 2011

As Zimbabwe is highly respected for valuing education as a fundamental right for every child, the policy compelling schools to accept children without paying fees has left most institutions teetering on the brink of collapse.

While the Government did the honourable thing and came up with a noble idea to afford all children the right to education, most parents are now abusing the facility by deliberately defaulting payment.

Government should revisit the issue and try to come up with a mechanism that ensures parents do not hide behind the directive, and intentionally default.

The sweet voice from the Government has disarmed the once-powerful school authorities turning them into toothless bulldogs that just helplessly watch their institutions crumbling. With all due respect, something has to be done to strike a balance between the interests of every pupil and the viability of institutions before the country’s education standards go to the dogs.

An economic analyst Mr Brains Muchemwa said the learn-now-pay-later system was not sustainable in the Zimbabwean economy. He said education was as basic as health and there is no basis for it to be treated differently from health or other basic rights that are paid for upfront.

“The basic human right of access to education is equally important as the right to health and right to basic accommodation.

“If in all other rights, basic as they are, people are paying upfront, what difference is it for education? When the central government does not have adequate fiscal space to meet even modest civil service salary increases, expecting schools therefore to operate on learn-now-pay-later schemes is taking socialist ambitions too far.

“Parents need to understand headmasters do not print money, (moreso for boarding schools), and indeed they should be responsible to ensure they work hard to afford their kids the right to education,” said Mr Muchemwa.

Huge water and electricity bills are piling at most schools with some, for fear of sending children home to collect fees, resorting to desperate measures like conducting civvies days once every week to raise funds. Such measures although they appear to be minor contributions, are indirectly making life difficult for low-income earners who are forced to fork out at least US$3 weekly on top of the school fees and levies.

Some schools have embarked on agreeing with defaulting parents on payment plans, but the strategy has proved to be very ineffective considering parents still default on the dates that they undertake to pay. Taking parents to court over such issues can be an option, but considering the delays in our justice delivery system, it does not qualify to be the best solution to the problem.

Delaying tactics may be employed resulting in court cases dragging for more than a year. If parents lose court cases, they still have a right to challenge the decision at a higher court to an extent that the school will spend more on lawyers than what parents owe them.

A court claim for fees for a single term may be finalised after two years after the school has lost much in legal fees. Despite the court battle, the pupils would be at school expecting to get normal service including those who will be having huge fee arrears.

In March this year, David Livingstone Primary School introduced compulsory civvies days whereby pupils were obliged to pay fees ranging from US$2 to US$3 every Wednesday as a way of reducing the school’s debts. At the time, the school owed Harare City Council US$15 000 and, it owed NSSA US$9 000.

The former Group A school’s development committee chairman Mr Clever Musakaruka categorically stated that the school was broke and the fundraising was a temporary measure to save it from total collapse.

“The school is actually broke. We held those fundraising activities because the school had no money. We would have wanted to conduct those fundraising activities throughout the term, but we failed due to unnecessary pressure and complaints from parents,” he said.

Further investigations revealed that Mabelreign Girls High in Harare that charges US$20 school fees, plus US$120 per term is one of the most affected schools operating with very high water and electricity bills.

Impeccable sources revealed that the girls’ school owed Zesa and Harare City Council thousands of dollars while several pupils were being allowed to attend lessons with high school fees arrears. Some, according to sources, have not even a single cent for this year.

The Treasurer for Mabelreign Girls High’s development committee Mr Partridge Sibanda said at least 30 percent of the pupils were not paying their fees and levies. He also said parents were taking advantage of the law that makes it an offence for authorities to expel children for non-payment of fees.

“About 70 percent are paying their fees and levies and, we normally have a default rate of 30 percent. That creates problems to the school and it leaves the school in serious financial problems, hampering development.

“The court process is unnecessarily long and expensive. The process only works for pupils who are still in school. When one finishes Form Four or Form Six without paying, it would be difficult to trace them for the debt. Some, especially when they fail, they do not pay. Those that live in rented houses may disappear as soon as they complete their studies and suing them would be difficult,” said Mr Sibanda.

A High Court judgment by Justice Maphios Cheda early this year that declared it illegal to expel pupils over fees brought about a change in the operation of schools. Part of Justice Cheda’s judgement delivered in January 2011 reads:

“When a parent or guardian secures a place for a child at a school or tertiary institution, a contract is entered between the said institution and the parent with regards to the payment of fees. The said contract can either be express or implied. Failure by the parent to pay the fees and levies results in the institution of legal proceedings against a minor who has no contract with the institution to pay fees. To do so is an abuse of authority on the part of the institution, which is an undue pressure to enforce payment of fees using pupils as pawns. This is therefore unlawful.”

It made it difficult to differentiate the new education policy from the free education system of the 1980s. Gone are the days when schoolchildren would be sent back home to collect fees. These days, one can now afford to safely send his or her child to school without paying a cent and get away with it.

A school needs water, electricity, fuel, sporting facilities, salaries for staff, stationery, vehicles, toilet chemicals, laboratory equipment and chemicals among others, to operate.

Toilet cleaners among other workers are an integral part of any institution and they need to be paid from the levies that pupils pay.

If there are no mechanisms to ensure defaulters pay their debts, then the collapse of such institutions would be the only option.

While it is well accepted and understood that some parents are failing to raise the required fees, others are just deliberately abusing the facility.

Education, Sports and Culture Minister David Coltart and his deputy Lazarus Dokora are on record warning school authorities against sending children home for failure to pay fees. The ministry described the idea as a breach of the children’s right to education.

Development committees and heads from various schools countrywide are crying foul over deliberate non-payment of fees by some parents who are taking advantage of the Government’s stance.

Most schools are operating with huge debts and are finding it difficult to run the institutions without money.


 

 

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Senator David Coltart to deliver the Annual Acton Lecture on Religion & Freedom on 26 July 2011 in Sydney

Facebook

20 June 2011

The Annual Acton Lecture on Religion & Freedom

Time

26 July · 18:00 – 19:00

Location

Theatrette, Parliament House, Parliament of NSW, Macquarie St, Sydney NSW 2000

Created by:

The Centre for Independent Studies

More info

Theatrette, Parliament House, Parliament of NSW

Macquarie St, Sydney NSW 2000

 

Date: 26 July 2011

Time: 5:45 pm – 7:00 pm

 

This year’s address will be delivered by prominent Zimbabwean politician, human rights lawyer, and pro-democracy activist, David Coltart. Senator Coltart is a committed and active Christian, and was a founding member of the Movement for Democratic Change, now in uneasy but determined coalition with long-reigning President Robert Mugabe. In 2009, Coltart was appointed Zimbabwe’s Minister for Education, Sports, Art and Culture. He will discuss religious influence in politics.

 

Registration options:

Non-Member $ 15.00

CIS Member Free Registration

 

Click here to book

http://www.cis.org.au/events/upcoming/event/81/The-Annual-Acton-Lecture-on-Religion-&-Freedom/0


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Twitter Weekly Updates for 2011-06-19

  • Congratulations to the Zimbabwe Sables rugby team fro beating Uganda 25-15 – great start to the Africa Cup http://t.co/muukfMg #
  • Spending three days in Masvingo and Midlands Provinces looking at school infrastructure needs – especially those in the rural areas #
  • Well done the Zimbabwe Sables rugby team for thrashing Madagascar 49-0 today. Zimbabwe rugby is on the up – next stop Namibia!! #
  • Methinks ZanuPF doth protest too much about the Livingstone report and what actually happened in Sandton this past weekend – a bit of angst? #
  • Best way to corrupt a youth is to instruct him to hold in higher esteem those who think alike than those who think differently – Nietzsche #
  • Wow Zim sportspeople are doing great things – Ngoni Makusha wins 100 metres and long jump at NCAA Outdoor Championships http://t.co/OJvKSH1 #
  • Makusha's personal record 9.89 is the fastest 100m in the history of college track and is the 4th fastest time in the entire world this year #
  • With Kirsty Coventry and Ngoni Makusha doing such great things I say bring on the 2012 Olympics; can't wait for them to fly Zim's flag high #
  • What a run for Zimbabwe – Muzhingi wins Comrades, Footballers beat Mali, Rugby beat Uganda and Madagascar, Makusha 4th fastest 100 this year #
  • Pakistan mull having Sri Lanka cricket series in Zimbabwe http://t.co/cMUpu0p Great! I hope they do it as we would love to have them here #
  • "Impatience in the region about the long
    period it is taking to find a perm & lasting solution to the
    challenges facing Zim" – SADC report #
  • "We have been disappointed by continuous
    backtracking and lack of implementation of resolutions and agreements made." SADC report #
  • "Focus that Zim parties have placed on elections without creating the necessary conducive climate for elections is an unfortunate sidetrack" #
  • "We must dissuade parties from thinking that they can hold elections in an atmosphere characterised by violence, intimidation and fear" #
  • "Fact that Zim parties are in an electioneering mode
    agitating for elections is counterproductive" SADC – only party doing this is Zanu PF #
  • "Ministers bunking Parliament" http://t.co/kL0D8gA – Constituents please note I was not in Parly Wednesday because I was inspecting schools! #
  • Plans approved for a new Test cricket ground at Victoria Falls – now that's a smart move – http://t.co/Ai81VPR #
  • I spent most of this week visiting schools in Masvingo and Midlands Provinces – the passion for education showed by poor parents was superb #
  • Have been told that Zimbabwe has an exciting new #golf talent – a youngster aged 14 playing off scratch who Nicky Price has under his wing #

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Mugabe in black and white

Mail and Guardian

By Percy Zvomuya

18 June 2011

The film Robert Mugabe … What Happened? is premised on the idea that the Zimbabwean president was a political saint who, inexplicably, turned into a sinner. Mugabe, a staunch Catholic, would disagree with such an assumption; years ago in an interview with a ­British journalist he dismissed such a notion, insisting that “what I was, I still am”.

A passage in activist Judith Garfield Todd’s memoir, Through the Darkness: A Life in Zimbabwe, seems to confirm this.

She quotes from a rather long statement made by Aaron Mutiti, a war veteran, just before Zimbabwe’s first democratic elections in 1980: “What Mugabe himself has done to his ­fellow Zimbabweans in exile ­during the last three years deprives his ­hollow assurances of any credibility. Unless the people of this country are vigilant, they are in for a rude shock. Family life, religious life and ­economic life as we know it will ­progressively disappear if Mugabe gets to power. We must not close our eyes to this threat. He rates his communist ideology higher than people.”

If we are to use these two quotes, the epigrammatic one by Mugabe and the sprawling and incisive one by Mutiti, the question “what ­happened?” seems rhetorical and pointless. Mugabe has remained true to himself.

To answer this question Capetonian filmmaker Simon Bright talked to the Mail & Guardian‘s publisher, Trevor Ncube, exiled newspaperman Geoff Nyarota, activists Elinor Sisulu and Michael Auret (the latter also produced the film), academics Lovemore Maduku and John Makumbe, former minister and Zanu-PF insider Simba Makoni, writer and patriarch Lawrence Vambe, opposition politicians David Coltart, Paul Themba Nyathi and the recently deceased Edgar Tekere, farmer and former minister Dennis Norman and war veteran leader ­Dzinashe Machingura.

It is a largely underwhelming list featuring the usual people who have opinions about Zimbabwe.

Treasured wisdom

But the unearthing of Vambe and ­Norman, ageing wise men, is something of a coup. Norman, a member of both Ian Smith and Mugabe’s governments, gives the other perspective — the view of the (formerly) propertied white elite. On the other hand Vambe, a peer of Mugabe, talks about him in the way an age mate would. Ncube, with a background in economic history, is ­interesting for his reasoned analysis and his attempts to understand the man he wrote about in his days as a ­journalist.

As most of the people in the ­documentary are sworn enemies of Mugabe, much of the middle-ground analyses come from Ncube, Vambe and, surprisingly, Norman.

It would have been interesting if past and present Mugabe acolytes such as Tafatawona Mahoso, Vimbai Chivaura, Enos Nkala, Jonathan Moyo and others had been given a chance to balance the narrative in the way Heidi Holland tried to do in her biography, Dinner with Mugabe, in which she interviewed both opponents and friends of the man. Other interesting voices would have been former Zambian president Kenneth Kaunda and his Mozambican counterpart, Joachim Chissano. I have seen these men in documentaries and other platforms on which they gave the other side of the story.

The film begins and ends with Mugabe’s ideas about ­democracy. “Democracy is a ­difficult proposition because the opposition will want more than they deserve,” he observes. (In 1980s Zimbabwe there was an attempt to establish what was called a one-party democracy.)

African democracy not ideal

I recently read Philip Gourevitch’s masterpiece on Rwanda, We Wish to Inform You that You Will Be Killed Tomorrow, in which he engages Uganda’s Yoweri Museveni. If the Ugandan president had his way, he would practise what he calls a “no-party democracy”. It’s not that Museveni is a totalitarian; he believes that ­essentials such as “universal suffrage, one person one vote … free press, ­separation of ­powers” should be adopted by all, but that the particular form that democracy takes “should be according to situations”.

The problem, I hear you say, is that those who want to impose their own version of democracy are incumbents who stand to benefit from its practise in the particular ways they impose. I am far from convinced that democracy as it is practised in Africa is ideal, but until we get a “perfect” system we had better make do with what we have.

The documentary has great ­archival footage of a young Mugabe, looking ­dashing without the spectacles and sounding articulate. This is where the commentary by Tekere and Vambe is crucial. They know or knew Mugabe in ways most of us will never do. Even though Mugabe and Tekere fought until the latter’s death, he is buried in the National Heroes Acre, perhaps the only person who had a serious rivalry with Mugabe to be accorded the privilege.

One of the problems with the documentary is its lack of context. For instance, there’s an episode in which David Coltart (minister of education in the present government of national unity) talks about receiving a telegram from Mugabe in the early 1980s. What it doesn’t say is that he received it when he was a law student at the University of Cape Town.

Then there are strange turns of logic I couldn’t understand. Nyarota, for example, seems to think part of the “change” in Mugabe was because of the arrival of the incarcerated Nelson Mandela on the world stage, thus eclipsing the erstwhile icon. He thinks the “tragedy” we have witnessed could be “a reckless attempt [by Mugabe] to reinvent himself”.

Idealistic days

Such tilts of logic are balanced by intelligent voices such as that of Nyathi, who observes that Zimbabweans in the north (mostly Shonas) and the world at large should have shown interest in the fate of the people of Matabeleland, where thousands were being killed in the Gukurahundi massacres of the 1980s.

These faults aside, Robert Mugabe … What Happened? is worth watching, if only for some of its great footage gleaned from vaults that go all the way back to the idealistic days of early Zimbabwean nationalism.

The Encounters documentary festival runs until June 26 at the Nu Metro on the V&A Waterfront in Cape Town, and in Johannesburg at Nu Metro Hyde Park and at the Bioscope in the Main Street Life centre. The festival features 37 films from 14 countries and five continents, including 11 world premieres. There are 19 recent documentaries from South Africa. For schedules and details of panel discussions visit www.encounters.co.za.


 

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