Belt tightening is only for the poor and not for the wealthy ruling elite: Coltart on new tax

Pindula News

4th October 2018

MDC politician and former Education Minister David Coltart has criticised the increase in the tax for money transfers saying the government wants to make the poor pay for its wastefulness in the use of resources. Minister of Finance Mthuli Ncube on Monday increased the money transfer tax from 5 cents per a transaction to 2 percent of the transaction.

Coltart also said that the poor would be the ones who bear the brunt of any belt-tightening measures while the “obscenely wealthy ruling elite” would not be affected. Coltart called on the opposition to reorganise and regroup so that it will be in a position to lead the country. Writing on his Facebook page, Coltart said:

“Tendai Biti left a domestic debt of $200 million when he left office in 2013. This awful regime has raked up a debt of $5 billion in one year and some $10 billion in total since Biti left office.

Now it intends on taxing the poor to pay for its profligacy. It is also separating US$ accounts from whatever Micky Mouse money accounts it has concocted. You can rest assured that Ministers and other senior members of ZANUPF will have access to forex, whereas the vast majority will not. I am reliably informed that President Mnangagwa has just taken delivery of some 20 center pivots on his farm near Kwe Kwe. Center pivots cost around $50000 each so where did that $1 million in forex come from, when most Zimbabweans cannot even get forex to pay for foreign medical and educational bills?

One thing we know from 38 years of ZANU-PF misrule is that the belt-tightening will only be done by poor Zimbabweans, not the obscenely wealthy ruling elite.

Now more than ever is the time for the MDC to rebuild and consolidate so that we are in a position to take over government and rebuild our country at the earliest possible opportunity.”

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Jonathan Moyo defends Coltart

Bulawayo News 24

By Stephen Jakes

3rd October 2018

Self imposed exile former Zanu PF politburo member Jonathan Moyo has leaped into MDC Alliance senior official David Coltart’s defence on accusations that he was a Selous Scout during the liberation war.
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“The claim that @DavidColtart was a Selous Scout is false. I started it as banter in 2001 & spread it by exaggerating David’s acknowledged service in the BSAP (British South Africa Police) in Rhodesia. The BSAP & Selous Scouts were not one & the same thing. David is my good friend!” Moyo tweeted.

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Jonathan Moyo says he lied David Coltart was Selous Scout

The Insider

2nd October 2018

Former Information Minister Jonathan Moyo says he lied that former Education Minister David Coltart was a member of the notorious Selous Scouts, but it has taken him 17 years to set the record straight.

Moyo said Coltart was his friend but that was only after Coltart asked him to put the record straight now that they saw “eye to eye on political matters”.

“The claim that @DavidColtart was a Selous Scout is false,” Moyo responded on his twitter handle. “I started it as banter in 2001 & spread it by exaggerating David’s aknowledged service in the BSAP (British South Africa Police) in Rhodesia. The BSAP & Selous Scouts were not one & the same thing. David is my good friend!”

Selous Scouts were a notorious unit of the Rhodesian army which masqueraded as guerillas and killed either liberation fighters or civilians with the guerillas being blamed for the atrocities.

One of Moyo’s followers Nzou Nyaokorefu asked: “Do you know how many of us r crazy believers out there and will believe anything that we told without “Independent” verification? That’s the impact when you r a public figure Prof. Unless you telling me I need to verify everything you say.”

Moyo said: “You must indeed verify what public officials say. It’s a necessity. Just look at what happens in mature democracies such as the US, UK & India. Factchecking is a business. Nothing is taken at face value. Nothing. Trust but verify! Prof Jonathan Moyo added,

“Public discourse is based on facts & opinions. The former are subject to verification & the latter to scrutiny. Facts are out there in data bases & archives, don’t store them in your head. Opinions are it, hence they are protected in the Bill of Rights as freedom of expression!

“Lastly & as previously noted here, good propaganda is not about telling lies but about exaggerating the truth or a fact by tweaking its context & blowing the tweaked context out of proportion. In Rhodesia, Selous Scouts & BSAP were separate armed forces serving one racist master!”

Another follower wekwaMtyambizi said he was not surprised at all at the turn of events.

“Mgabe & @nelsonchamisa are now friends, @DavidColtart & @ProfJNMoyo are now teling us of their friendship, @KbhasikitiGmai1 is now mdc, grac mgabe is now ful of @edmnangagwa praise. Almst 12mnths since coup no1 has bin jailed 4 coruption. Makudo ndemamwe.”

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I’m the brains behind POSA, Dabengwa reveals

The Chronicle

By Mashudu Netsianda, Senior Reporter

1st October 2018

ZAPU leader Dr Dumiso Dabengwa has revealed that he is the brains behind the original Public Order and Security Act (POSA) Bill but former President Mr Robert Mugabe refused to sign it because it was “too liberal.”

In an interview yesterday, Dr Dabengwa said the POSA Bill that eventually sailed through Parliament, was a “grossly edited version” of his brainchild.

POSA repealed the draconian and colonial-era Law and Order Maintenance Act (LOMA).

It was introduced in Zimbabwe in 2002 and amended in 2007.

Dr Dabengwa, who was then Home Affairs Minister, said he was the mover to replace LOMA and invited the Law Society of Zimbabwe and members of civil society to discuss POSA.

“Indeed, POSA is my baby because I had been tortured and imprisoned by the Rhodesian government under LOMA during the liberation struggle. It really pained me to see the same piece of legislation that was used to imprison us in the early 1960s still in place in Zimbabwe hence I made a move to have it completely repealed and replaced by POSA when I was Home Affairs Minister,” he said.

The former Zanu-PF Politburo member and Cabinet Minister said he consulted President Emmerson Mnangagwa who was then Justice Minister, legal experts and civil society.

“I did lots of consultations, first with (President) Emmerson Mnangagwa who was then Justice Minister and we agreed since he had also been imprisoned under LOMA. We went together and brought a number of legal experts among them the likes of Mr David Coltart and we also extensively consulted civil society and held meetings and discussed issues with people like Ms Priscilla Misihairabwi (Mushonga) who represented civil society,” he said.

“Finally when we agreed on the format that it was supposed to take, I had it drafted by the Parliamentary Legal Committee and it was then brought back to me so that I could be able to steer it through Parliament. It was not easy as there were a number of issues raised by people who opposed certain sections of the Bill, but I managed to get it through almost completely unamended.”

Dr Dabengwa said Mr Mugabe sat on the Bill, arguing that it was too liberal.

“The Bill went through all stages of Parliament and it was passed and went to the President’s Office for a signature but the President would not sign because he had a number of objections. He thought the Bill was too liberal but he didn’t even bother to find out or ask me why I decided to bring certain issues on the Bill.

“All he did was to sit on it and made sure it lapsed because after three months without the President assenting, a Bill automatically lapses and this was about the time we were getting towards the 2000 elections,” he said.

Dr Dabengwa said changes to the Bill were later made by his predecessor, the late Cde John Landa Nkomo.

“The same name was used and during John Nkomo’s time and a number of changes were made which completely diluted the Bill from what it was. There were some repressive sections in LOMA, which we had removed, and one of them is the issue of having to get permission from the police for meetings and that Bill said all that you needed to do was to inform the police of the meeting in case you encounter problems and it also placed the onus on the conveners to first inform police of a demonstration. In the event that any property was damaged, the leaders would then be solely responsible for repairing the damages thereof,” he said.

Dr Dabengwa claimed the current POSA signifies little improvement on LOMA.

“The Bill that I introduced was a liberal POSA which you will find in almost every democratic country and it is completely different from the POSA that we have now. When they came up with the new POSA Bill, I was very angry,” he said.

Opposition parties regard POSA as an Act that helped Mr Mugabe consolidate his power post-2000 during demonstrations and protests.

Justice, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs Minister Cde Ziyambi Ziyambi recently announced that the Government is set to amend POSA, the Police Act as well as the Citizenship Act as part of an initiative to align legislation with the Constitution.

There has previously been resistance to amend some laws but this reluctance to comply with the Constitution is being addressed in the Second Republic. The Government under President Mnangagwa has since pledged to entrench civil liberties. Officially opening the 9th Parliament of Zimbabwe, President Mnangagwa pronounced the legislative agenda which is guided by the need to align laws to the new constitution, to further democratise the nation and ensure that the country achieves its 2030 developmental vision. — @mashnets

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The Rarity of White African Politicians’ Involvement in African Politics

AllAfrica.com

By Kylie Kiunguyu

27th September 2018

Southern Africa unlike other parts of the continent has had a number of White government officials in post-colonial Africa. With Zimbabwe recently appointing Kirsty Coventry as Youth, and Sports Minister, we take a look at the rarity of White African politicians in many countries. We ask: Why do White Africans seem to be on the periphery of the political sphere?

Given Africa’s colonial past it’s no small wonder that positions of political power cannot be easily conceded to those that resemble historical oppressors. However, given the numerous communities of White settlers that remained on the continent it is curious that not more of them have pursued governance positions. The conspicuous absence of White people in corridors of political power across various African countries raises various questions around this racial imbalance in political participation. The absence is particularly stark considering White Africans are quite visible in the governance of economic affairs, so why do they seem to be on the periphery of the political sphere?

For many African countries it is not common to find White Africans getting involved in African politics, particularly in elective post-colonial African politics. The absence of White politicians for some Africans is embedded in the longstanding narrative of colonial and post-colonial African politics that has defined Blackness as synonymous with African nationalism, an ideological barrier which is difficult to scale for many White Africans. However, the negative effects of corruption and bad governance which has seriously constrained development in some countries and constituencies has helped to justify the candidature of White African politicians, as the electorate start to see beyond the issue of race.

Statistics on White African population

According to statistics, there were an estimated 5.6 million White Africans of European ancestry on the African continent in 1989 most of whom were Dutch, British, Portuguese, German and French. The majority of them based along the Mediterranean coast, in South Africa, or in Zimbabwe.

These numbers were much higher before states began gaining independence and continuously varied after regional decolonization where White Africans were represented in every part of the continent in key political, industrial and commercial agriculture positions.

The “White flight” phenomenon that accompanied regional decolonization resulted in destructive economic repercussions for the emerging states due to the abrupt loss of much-needed technical skills. But it also resulted in the termination of white minority rule.

African countries with the highest white populations

At the top of the list is quite obviously South Africa with Afrikaaners making up 8.7% of the population and a total of 4,602,000 white populace including those of British and Australian origin. Next in line is Angola with a total of 220,000 making up 1.2% of the population many of whom are of Portuguese origin.

The top five also features Namibia at 154,000, Madagascar at 120,000, Tunisia and Morocco both at 100,000. Interestingly Zimbabwe that has had quite a number of White Africans in governments only has a population of approx. 28,732. Unlike a country like Kenya that has a population of approx. 67,000 but only a few White government officials after independence.

Notable White African Politicians

With the exemption of some first ladies and conservationists few White African politicians have served at national and local government level in Tanzania, Uganda, DRC, Rwanda, Swaziland, Nigeria, Ghana, Mozambique, Ivory Coast, Gabon, Senegal, Cameroon amongst other African countries.

Some countries that have had singular or sparse political personalities include:

Malawi: Malawian of Dutch descent, Jan-Jaap Jakobus Sonke, was Member of Parliament in Malawi from 1999 till 2004. He is a former Deputy Minister of Finance and Economic Planning, and of Public Works of Malawi.

Kenya: The White Africans who have served in government include Bruce Roy McKenzie; as Minister of Agriculture in Kenya during Jomo Kenyatta’s presidency. Humphrey Slade was the inaugural Speaker of the National Assembly, from 1967 to 1970. Philip Leakey served Langata Constituency as MP for 13 years, and was an assistant minister for a short stint. Leakey represented the KANU party led by then president Daniel Arap Moi. Richard Leakey served as cabinet secretary and head of the civil service in 1999 in Daniel Arap Moi’s administration.

Seychelles: Has had two presidents Sir James Richard Marie Mancham who founded the Seychelles Democratic Party and was the first President of Seychelles from 1976 to 1977 and France-Albert René who was the President of Seychelles from 1977 to 2004. They also had a prominent opposition leader Gérard Hoarau who sought to overthrow France-Albert René.

Uganda: In Uganda, Ian Clarke, was recently elected chairman of a district of Kampala.

Zambia: Guy Scott served as the 12th Vice-President of Zambia from 2011 to 2014, and was the acting President of Zambia between October 2014 and January 2015. He was the first white president of Zambia and the first white president in sub-Saharan Africa since F. W. de Klerk, South Africa’s last apartheid-era president, left office in 1994.

Zimbabwe: The country has had numerous White politicians serving in various capacity in cabinet, and at local government level. These include, Dr. Timothy Stamps, Zimbabwe’s former Minister for Health, Denis Norman spent a total of twelve years in the Cabinet of President Robert Mugabe, serving as Minister of Agriculture, Minister of Transport and Minister of Power – from 1990 to 1997. White Zimbabweans have also been actively involved in opposition politics, and some of the notable names include Minister of Education in the inclusive government from 2009 to 2013 David Coltart, Trudy Stevenson (late), a human rights activist and former Ambassador to Senega, Roy Bennett (late), Michael Auret, a veteran human rights activist and Brian James, former Mayor of Mutare.

However, these six cases are not a representative sample but give a snapshot of the involvement of White people in African politics, which is not widespread.

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Putting servant-leadership into perspective and context

The Chronicle

By Tomson Dube

17th September 2018

THE current mantra in Zimbabwe — Zimbabwe is open for business — has become synonymous with Servant Leadership especially by the public office bearers as they emulate the President of the Republic of Zimbabwe, His Excellency, Cde Emmerson Dambudzo Mnangagwa.

I have heard on numerous occasions before, during and after the harmonised elections of July 30, 2018, the same phrase (servant-leadership) being used by His Excellency, the President of Zimbabwe and his honourable ministers emulating the same. I would like to shed some knowledge to the public and some of the Honourable ministers who merely regurgitate the phrase without adequate knowledge and understanding of what this powerful phrase means.

The notion of servant leadership has been recognised in the leadership literature since leadership gurus like Burns in 1978 and Greenleaf’s 1977 publications. There are 10 characteristics of servant leadership (i.e. listening, empathy, healing, awareness, persuasion, conceptualisation, foresight, stewardship, commitment to growth of people, and building community) and this is based solely on readings by Greenleaf.

Some argue that these characteristics are not grounded in solid research studies.

Given the pronouncement by His Excellency the President, Cde ED Mnangagwa, that he views his leadership style as a servant leader, his emphasis is on community, empowerment, shared authority, and relational power.

Servant leaders provide great promise for the future. This is what the President ED Mnangagwa represents. According to Greenleaf (1977), servant leaders are leaders who put other people’s needs, aspirations and interests above their own. The servant leader’s deliberate choice is to serve others.

Actually the servant leader’s chief motive is to serve first, as opposed to lead. This concept is historically represented by Jesus Christ who for me is the core-construct of servant leaders. One outstanding characteristic of servant leaders is that they seek to transform their followers to “grow healthier, wiser, freer, more autonomous, and more likely themselves to become servants.” (Sendjaya & Sarros, 2002, p.58). Robert K Greenleaf was the AT&T Chief Executive Officer in the United States of America (USA) when he conceived this notion of servant leadership and later on introduced it into the organisational context.

Contextually, the servant leader is servant first . . . It begins with the natural feeling that one wants to serve first, to serve first. That conscious choice brings one to make sure that other people’s highest-priority needs are being served. Put into perspective, Robert K Greenleaf understood this concept through reading of a Herman Hesse’s (1956), story about a spiritual pilgrimage, Journey to the East.

In the story, we see a band of men on a mythical journey . . . The central figure of the story is Leo, who accompanies the party as the servant who does their chores and all menial jobs for the travellers but also sustains them with his spirits and song. The servant’s presence has an extraordinary impact on the group, but when the servant becomes lost and disappears, the group of travellers falls into disarray and abandons the journey. Without the servant, they are unable to carry on. The servant was leading the group. He emerged as a leader by caring for the travellers. (Northouse, 2007, p.349).

The narrator, one of the party, after some years of wondering, finds Leo and is taken into the Order that had sponsored the journey. There he discovers that Leo, whom he had known first as servant, was in fact the titular head of the Order, its guiding spirit, a great and noble leader.

As appealing and refreshing as Greenleaf’s conceptualisation of servant leadership is, Greenleaf is the individual who first introduced the notion of servant leadership to everyday human endeavour. It was Christianity’s founder Jesus Christ, who first taught the concept of servant leadership. From the narrative accounts of his life in the Bible, it is evident that servant leadership was taught and practised more than two thousand years ago.

This practice has been echoed in the lives of ancient monarchs for over 1000 years. Ancient monarchs acknowledged that they were in the service of their country and their people – even if their actions were not consistent with this.

What we witnessed on Sunday, 30th August 2018, the inauguration of the President, His Excellency, Cde ED Mnangagwa in modern day Zimbabwe, the coronation ceremony involved the acknowledgement of service to God, country, and the people. Politicians define their role in terms of public service. And service has always been at the core of leadership in the spiritual arena, symbolised at the highest level by Jesus Christ washing the feet of his disciples.

In addition to serving, the servant leader has a social responsibility to be concerned with the have-nots and to recognise them as equal stakeholders in the life of the organisation. In becoming a servant leader, a leader uses less institutional power and less control while shifting authority to those who are being led (Northouse, 2007).

While President Cde ED Mnangagwa has articulated his leadership style as a servant leader, are all his followers of the same understanding? For example, in developed countries a politician runs for office because s/he has the money to develop their constituency. They have the money, they take on board the constituency ideas and develop the community together with the people.

What we have witnessed in Zimbabwe and other African countries over the years is that some if not most of our politicians go into politics to get the money, to spend (ukukapula/kudya) and get rich and richer.

The poor they purport to represent remain poorer.

The said politician sees it as a right and a time for them to eat. My prayer is that the newly appointed MPs, and the appointed Cabinet ministers should take a leaf from humble names such as the former Minister of Education, Hon David Coltart. He refused the luxury of a brand new ministerial Mercedes Benz.

A person like the recently elected MP for Bulawayo South and the deputy minister of Industry and Commerce, Mr Rajeshakumart Modi. It is clear he is not in it for the money but for a legacy and mandate to do community work. So the other old timers and newly elected ones, can parrot the servant leadership statement as much as they want, but they themselves may or are not servants at heart. People understand what servant leadership is and know what it is (servant leadership) but are not what it is.

Servant leaders do not announce that here I am. Look at me, I am a servant leader . . . The spirit of servanthood is not there at all. However, after labouring for 38 years under the tutelage of the former President of Zimbabwe, Mr Robert Gabriel Mugabe, the current President (Cde ED Mnangagwa) has a wealth of experience and desires to not make the same mistakes.

People should see it (servant leadership) and not to be told through pronouncements. Walk it, live it talk it and we will say here is a servant leaders.. Recently, I read an article by Nick Mangwana’s Views from the Diaspora in our sister paper, The Herald. Mangwana (2018) posited that one may ask why President Mnangagwa saw it fit to contest for power. The answers are simply to reform Zimbabwe’s democracy, its policy, its economic system and its way of doing things. Zimbabweans would simply say, to shift its paradigm.

As projected by Cde ED, this trajectory and desire will make Zimbabwe a middle-income country by 2030. Mangwana (2018) points out that this is not a push for self-actualisation but one to a desire to actualise greatness in others. For one to do this they should listen and listen deep and good. This is why this descriptor is favoured by President Mnangagwa who many agree is a listening President.

The question is whether his colleagues in leadership are on board? If the newly appointed crop of a diversified democratic technocratic Cabinet will defy all odds and live up to their calling, then Zimbabwe will definitely be a middle-income economy by 2030.

The same questions that were raised by Mangwana, I still raise them now: Are the citizens on board? Is his bureaucracy on board? Is everyone prepared to develop intentness on listening? Let us give our visionary and listening President a chance to chart out the great path he has taken and shown. The much talked about diverse Cabinet has to start the work and literally should hit the road running.

Congratulations President ED Mnangagwa for retiring the old guard, that is bold and its leadership.

My prayer is that you tackle corruption and start this great journey without an apology. Part II looks at the application of servant leadership in the context of President ED Mnangagwa’s pronouncements and government.

*Pastor Tomson Dube is a lead pastor at a church in Bulawayo and the University Chaplain at the National University of Science and Technology (Nust). He writes this article in his own personal capacity as a leader and a voice to the nations. You can get hold of Pastor Tomson Dube via e-mail on tomsondube@gmail.com

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New cabinet an average team

Zimbabwe Independent

By Kudzai Kuwaza

14th September 2018

THE cabinet appointed by President Emmerson Mnangagwa last week dubbed the “dream team” by government publicists, though a marked improvement from previous ones, has shortcomings as it features ministers dogged by allegations of corruption, while in some cases the appointments were based on patronage and factional considerations – make it an average team.

Mnangagwa appointed a 20-member cabinet on Friday last week fronted by renowned financial expert Mthuli Ncube, who was chief economist and vice-president of the African Development Bank, as Finance minister and swimming sensation Kirsty Coventry, who was appointed Sports minister. The two are seen as brilliant appointments.

As chief economist of AfDB, Ncube, who distinguished himself in academia and the corporate world, oversaw the Economics Complex, which is focussed on the process of knowledge management within the bank and with its partners.

He also superintended over the general strategic economic research within the financial institution.

Coventry is a member of the International Olympic Committee athletes’ commision and is widely acclaimed as Africa’s best-ever Olympian, with seven medals.

The appointment of Joel Biggie Matiza as Transport minister has also been lauded as he is a relatively successful professional and businessman in his own right, thus has the credentials to lead the ministry.

Mnangagwa dropped senior members of his previous cabinet, including Patrick Chinamasa, Obert Mpofu, Simbarashe Mumbegegwi and Simon Khaya Moyo, re-assigning them to work for the party on a full-time basis.

He also appointed Oppah Muchinguri-Kashiri as Defence minister, taking the portfolio away from Vice-President Constantino Chiwenga. Assigning Chiwenga to the Defence ministry was also in violation of the constitution.

The appointment of Muchinguri-Kashiri is viewed as a move to neutralise Chiwenga’s influence in government as the power struggle between the two escalates.

The cabinet selection has been applauded in many quarters with even opposition leaders like David Coltart adding to the chorus of approval.

“Brief comment on new Zim Cabinet—good that it is only 20, no Mpofu or Chinamasa, good Finance and Sports ministers in Ncube and Kirst Coventry,” Coltart wrote on microblogging site Twitter.

“So overall an improvement on the last one. I am always happy to give credit where it is due.”

However, despite the positive noises about the cabinet, there are a number of appointments that have raised eyebrows.

Questions continue to swirl over the qualifications of Obadiah Moyo, who was appointed Minister of Health. He is accused of fabricating his qualifications and, when journalists asked him to clarify the matter, he declined to comment.

In a classified cable from 2008 titled Collapse: Zimbabwe’s Health Care System, the United States embassy in Harare raises doubts over Moyo’s qualifications.

“Moyo’s business card indicates he has both a PhD and a medical degree. After our initial meeting, we learned that he earned neither. Rather, he was Sally Mugabe’s dialysis technician at Parirenyatwa throughout her long struggle with a kidney disease. After Sally’s death, Mr Moyo suddenly became Dr Moyo, and in 2004 he became CEO of Chitungwiza Hospital,” the cable read.

There are questions, for instance, over his Master of Philosophy degree in Medicine which he claims to have attained at the University of Zimbabwe. There is no mention of such a degree programme at the institution.

Moyo’s credentials are being questioned at a time the country has been hit by a cholera epidemic, raising further questions on Mnangagwa’s pick for the ministry.

The retention of July Moyo to the Local Government portfolio after he lost the Redcliff parliamentary election is seen as evidence that patronage was a major factor in the appointment of cabinet ministers.

July Moyo is considered Mnangagwa’s right-hand man and one of the strategists in his Zanu PF faction.

July Moyo’s ill-fated decision to bar commuter omnibuses from entering Harare’s city centre had disastrous consequences with commuters forced to walk long distances to get to their destinations amid howls of protest. The decision was shelved after just one day.

One of Mnangagwa’s allies, Joram Gumbo, was appointed Energy minister despite being entangled in the aircraft purchase scandal which involves state-owned Air Zimbabwe and controversial airline Zimbabwe Airways) whose ownership is dodgy when he was Transport minister.

Gumbo’s reappointment of Eric Gumbi and Angeline Karonga to the Zimbabwe National Road Administration board as well as Civil Aviation of Zimbabwe boss David Chaota also clouded his tenure as Transport minister. Some of these individuals at the two institutions had been removed after allegations of corruption and other irregularities had been raised against them.

Nqobizitha Mangaliso Ndlovu, who was appointed Industry minister, has virtually no experience to run the portfolio, raising issues of patronage.

This has raised concerns at a time industry is beset by a number of challenges which include obsolete equipment and foreign currency shortages which would need an experienced technocrat to steer the troubled ship. His appointment is believed to be based on political patronage, given that his father Richard Ndlovu was a longstanding Zanu PF politburo member.

Ministers such as Muchinguri-Kashiri and Sithembiso Nyoni have been part of previous cabinets and have no track records of delivery.

Business consultant Simon Kayereka said some of the appointments could turn cabinet, which has been dubbed the dream team, into a huge disappointment.

“The so-called dream team could turn into a nightmare. The Local Government minister is a tried and tired cadre who has a mammoth task of turning a chiefdom into an efficient system that is free of political point scoring,” Kayereka said.

“Prof Ncube however will do a good job as long as the politburo does not issue directives and reversals, or stand in his way.”

Political analyst Dumisani Nkomo said although the cabinet is well-balanced, the retention of some failed ministers is a major drawback.

“I think to be fair it is a fairly balanced cabinet. The disappointment for me is the appointment of the likes of Cain Mathema who have been a perennial failure,” Nkomo said.

Analysts say although the new cabinet is a mixture of youths, technocrats and experience, it also has appointees based on loyalty, patronage and cronyism who maybe an albatross around Mnangagwa’s neck.

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Coventry ‘a mere swimmer’?

Newsday

By Conway Tutani

14th September 2018
Anything that can go wrong will go wrong, so says Murphy’s law.

Well, Murphy’s law seems to following — nay, stalking — losing MDC Alliance presidential candidate Nelson Chamisa.

CONWAY TUTANI

If there are two or more ways to do something and one of those results in a catastrophe, then someone will do it that catastrophic way.

This is exactly what happened last week when Chamisa, addressing a rally in Chitungwiza, had the choice of using one of the two Shona words for a swimmer, which is mushambiri, in referring to new Sports minister Kirsty Coventry, but he opted for the other word, which is not printable here because it is not mentionable in Ndebele.

In short, the Shona word that Chamisa used has a totally different meaning in Ndebele: the posterior opening of the human anatomy or, in short, anus.

But if it was only a double entrende — a word or phrase open to two interpretations, one of which is usually risqué or indecent — these things happen and all reasonable people will not go to town about it condemning Chamisa for just using the first word that came naturally to his lips and is very much in the vocabulary of his Karanga dialect of Shona.

I remember a South Sudanese politician whose first name was Clement, but whose surname was unprintable in Zimbabwe because in Shona the word refers to the male anatomy, but you can’t — in all fairness and rationality — demand that Clement’s surname be changed because in his language, which is his heritage, it has a completely different and innocuous meaning.

At the other extreme, Chamisa’s choice of the word could have been due to a Freudian slip, which, if so, raises serious issues about him.

A Freudian slip, as it is called in psychoanalysis, is an “error” in speech, memory, or physical action that is interpreted as occurring due to the interference of an unconscious subdued wish or internal train of thought.

Combine this with tasteless remarks Chamisa has made about women before, there could be something more to it which is not easily noticeable or discernible until one takes a closer look to see if there is a pattern..

Remember during the election campaign Chamisa referring to Thokozani Khupe’s MDC formation as “MDC-Tokoloshe”, playing on her first name, imputing that Khupe, by going her own way, was being driven by witchcraft, “tokoloshe” being the Nguni word for a mischievous and evil spirit called upon by malevolent people to cause trouble for others?

As one can see, Chamisa’s reckless choice of words has been most unfortunate too many times in too short a time, opening him for attack. As an example, Chamisa declared on eNCA TV on July 29, 2018, on the eve of the harmonised elections, that “we will leave no turn unstoned (yes, he inverted or subverted “no stone unturned” to ensure, as he alleged, there would be no rigging).

This could have been interpreted as threatening violence.

That is why it has been suggested that Murphy’s law is more a psychological manifestation than mere superstition.

That is why Chamisa’s most disparaging remarks about Coventry are most unsettling. Chamisa has this tendency of playing to his political base and everyone is seeing that except that political base itself — like the cheated husband or wife who is the last to know, the main reason being that when you are in a mob like at a rally, you will be targeted for accusations as rocking the boat if you are seen to be asking too many questions.

Furthermore, the supporters may have the hunch or feeling that things are not as they should be, but to admit or acknowledge that for a fact could be more than they are emotionally prepared to handle.

If it becomes too real, they will have decisions to make, but often they are just not ready to do that.

So they would rather be in denial without facing up to the real truth.

They would rather deflect everything to Zanu PF and laugh in self-satisfied superiority — in the manner some MDC supporters seem to take delight in the fact that new Health minister Obadiah Moyo had plunged straight into a cholera crisis, but fail to see that their own councillors have plunged into the same crisis.

That is how they can’t face the truth.

Addressing the rally in Chitungwiza at the weekend, Chamisa said he felt pity seeing Coventry being “dragged” into Cabinet and referred to the decorated Olympian as a toddler.

Such indelicate, indecorous and indecent language is most unbecoming. First, this is most unreasonable.

Chamisa should not draw in Coventry in his fights with Mnangagwa.

Second, Coventry is only five years younger than Chamisa, so he has no basis of calling her a “toddler”.

Third, referring to Coventry as “a mere swimmer” is insulting and ignorant.

One, a world beater like Coventry cannot be “a mere swimmer” by any definition.

This is an example of lying about Coventry by diminishing her achievements and status.

Two, Coventry attended Auburn University on a tennis scholarship, giving her a fallback option, giving her life outside the pool.

Three, Coventry has attained more fame and fortune than Chamisa himself, making her a far higher achiever than him.

By omitting to mention this to his supporters at the Chitungwiza rally, Chamisa lied by omission or, if there is anything like that, lied by ignorance.

Coventry’s outlook is not as cynical as some people because she has confounded herself as an achiever on the global stage and knows that anything is possible. To conquer the world, you have to be an optimist and she is one such optimist who believes Zimbabwe can rise and shine like she did.

In fact, she has been one of the most patriotic Zimbabweans in good times and in bad times.

Wrote former Education minister David Coltart in his book The Struggle Continues: 50 Years of Tyranny in Zimbabwe: “I … entered into discussions with Zimbabwean Olympic swimming star Kirsty Coventry and the Australian embassy … about the supply of several thousand small plastic ‘lapdesks’ for rural schools … Coventry had lent her name to the exercise, which made the lapdesks instantly attractive to young children.”

This was in 2010 during the time of the Government of National Unity when being associated with an opposition minister like Coltart, especially when you are white like Coventry, could be particularly perilous.

Did Coltart unfairly “drag” her into that storm when she was much younger?

That is the same pluck — determined spirit and courage — about Coventry I wrote about in 2012 in a piece titled Thanks for the memories, Kirsty: “… as Coventry struck Olympic gold, she also struck a blow for acceptance that — white, black or any colour — we are all Zimbabweans.

She — in her small but significant way — advanced the cause of racial tolerance.

It showed people the falsity of buying into the myth of labelling all whites as basically racist monsters.

That was the direct effect of her indirect contribution to the Zimbabwean political discourse.”

Using what turns out be an inappropriate word is very much forgivable, but for Chamisa to then go on and belittle Coventry, saying Zimbabwe needs more than a mere swimmer for a minister, is going too far.

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David Coltart slammed

Harare Post

By Bernard Mutambudzi

12th September 2018

David Coltart’s call for the newly appointed Minister of Youth, Sports, Arts and Recreation, Kirsty Coventry to decline the perks that come with the appointment has been viewed as utterances bent on causing unnecessary racial lines in Government.

In his twitter page, Coltart said, “This is a time of austerity and we need leadership to tighten their belts. I am looking forward to the new cabinet declining to take luxury vehicles. For Kirsty Coventry, it would be grateful if you could set that example for all young people who need your inspiration.”

Zanu PF Secretary for Administration in the Youth League, Cde Tendai Chirau blamed Coltart for the racial utterances.

“Coltart cannot dictate pace on who gets what in Government,” said Chirau.

Another youth, Terrence Danda weighed in, “That’s not fair to name her in particular, why put her on the spot like that, it’s her own right to accept and use any vehicle or benefit that comes with the office.”

Kirsty Coventry, a former Olympic champion and a current member of the International Olympic Committee (IOC’s) executive board, was appointed Minister of Youth, Sports, Arts and Recreation.

The 34-year-old Miinister was vice-president of the Zimbabwe Olympic Committee. She also chairs the IOC’s athletes’ commission.

President Emmerson Mnangagwa who has the prerogative to choose any five Ministers outside Parliament appointed Coventry because of her achievements in the field of sport.

Coventry won gold medals in the 200m backstroke at the 2004 and 2008 Olympics and also has four silvers and a bronze, the most Olympic medals by an African athlete.

Coventry is known as the country’s “golden girl” for her Olympic success and was given $100 000 by the then-president Robert Mugabe after winning four medals at the 2008 Beijing Games, a huge prize for a Zimbabwean athlete.

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Bulawayo blast probe raises questions

Daily News

By Jeffrey Muvundusi

9th September 2018

Police are still to make inroads in their investigations into the White City Stadium bomb blast in June in spite of claims by President Emmerson Mnangagwa that the suspects are now known.

Police sources told the Daily News on Sunday last week that the probe was still inconclusive despite the bold official claims, suggesting there was conflict between security arms deployed to work on this sensitive case.

Last month, Mnangagwa told Zanu PF candidates who excelled in the just-ended harmonised polls that “we now have the knowledge of who did it”.

He said all they were waiting for was for the electoral processes to pass, before dealing with the matter.

Events on the ground are, however, pointing to a government at war with itself on how to proceed with the investigations.

A top security agent here told the Daily News on Sunday last week that police were yet to identify and arrest the suspects.

He said the police have been cast aside in the investigations, with other security arms getting ahead of them.

“This is a high security issue, maybe those in Harare know things that we might not know here. Remember we have been shut out of this. But as far as we are concerned here in Bulawayo, we are still hunting for the suspects,” he said.

Police have dangled a $100 000 reward for information leading to the arrest of the suspects.

This was after Mnangagwa narrowly escaped an assassination attempt on June 23 when an explosion rocked a Zanu PF rally at White City Stadium.

The blast claimed lives of two security aides, while scores of Zanu PF supporters, including top government officials, were injured.

As the hunt for suspects intensified days after the explosion, police arrested and briefly dragged to court two suspects — Douglas Musekiwa and John Zulu — from Old Pumula suburb.

After having spent almost a week in incarceration, it later turned out that the suspects were merely touts operating from Old Pumula Bus Terminus.

They were released as the law enforcers apparently failed to stitch up evidence against them.

In a desperate bid to get to the bottom of the matter, government hired seven Belarusian ballistics experts to assist the multi-agency security team investigating the deadly grenade attack.

This brought the number of foreign investigators assisting the local team to 11 after four Russian experts had earlier on reportedly been engaged into the investigations as well.

Police sources told the Daily News on Sunday that the investigations by the Russians revealed that the explosive used in carrying out the attack was a grenade made in the former Soviet Union, which was lobbed towards the direction of Mnangagwa and his entourage as they were leaving the high table.

The sources said investigators are still to identify where exactly the device came from.

Then Home Affairs minister Obert Mpofu referred questions to police spokesperson Charity Charamba after he had been contacted for comment.

“Talk to Charamba, she is in a better position to tell you about that because they (police) are the ones who have such reports,” Mpofu said ahead of the new Cabinet announcement that saw him lose his post.

Charamba was not helpful either, as she said: “I don’t have information at the moment. I will try to contact my team in Bulawayo and hear if there is any update.”

Zanu PF secretary for legal affairs Paul Mangwana refused to be drawn into the matter, referring this reporter to security agents assigned to handle the investigations.

“It’s a security matter which is being handled by the security agents not the party,” he said.

Pressed to shed more light on claims by Mnangagwa that the suspects have been identified, Mangwana said: “The president was speaking as the president of Zimbabwe not the president of the party.”

Observers have strongly argued that the bomb blast was an inside job, mostly likely to have been fuelled by the factional tensions in the ruling Zanu PF party.

In an interview with the BBC in July, Mnangagwa gave credence to these suspicions when he told the interviewer that his “hunch without evidence” was that loyalists of former president Robert Mugabe and his wife, Grace, were behind the attack.

Legal experts told the Daily News on Sunday last week that the investigators should be given time to do a thorough job and not to rush to make arrests without conclusive evidence.

Lawyer Dumisani Dube said it was clear from Mnangagwa’s statements that the investigations were still underway and that once investigations have been finalised, police would then move to effect arrests.

“Our Constitution does not call for indefinite incarcerations on the rights of accused and arrested persons who are deemed innocent until they have been proven otherwise by a competent court after a free and fair trial and there is evidence beyond reasonable doubt that indeed there have committed the offence alleged.

“Simply put, it is the due process of the law which is unravelling and, as usual, wheels of justice are very slow to move: However, once in motion they move,” Dube said.

Respected lawyer David Coltart said now that Mnangagwa has been inaugurated following his narrow victory at the polls, he should fulfil his promise not only for his benefit but for the nation too.

“As I recall Mnangagwa said he knew who the suspect was but he would wait for the outcome of the election. But now that he has been inaugurated one would expect that if they know who the suspect is, that person will now be formally arrested and prosecuted before our courts but this has not happened,” Coltart said.

“In the interest of Mnangagwa’s own security and safety, (it is important) that he who is responsible for the attack is brought before the courts as soon as possible. But, the fact that it has not happened makes us wonder if they have identified the suspect as they say.”

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