Mutambara may leave government

New Zimbabwe.com

25 January 2011

Decision time … Arthur Mutambara

DEPUTY Prime Minister Arthur Mutambara is said to be considering quitting the government after he was effectively demoted by his party.

MDC president Welshman Ncube announced at the weekend that he would be taking over from Mutambara as Deputy Premier after was he was elected the party’s leader at its congress early this month.

Ncube said Mutambara would be re-assigned to the portfolio of Regional Integration and International Co-operation Minister, with party secretary general Priscilla Misihairabwi-Mushonga taking over as Industry and Commerce Minister.

Mutambara – who left the country on Sunday to attend the World Economic Forum in Switzerland – has not commented on his reassignment.

Still, the state-run Herald newspaper claimed that he had discussed his future plans with a senior government official before leaving Harare and would “soon” make public his intentions.

Education Minister David Coltart, who is also a senior member of the MDC, refused to comment on the speculation.

“I was not there at the meeting (on Sunday) when the decision was made [to reassign Mutambara] and I don’t know if he has been formally informed ,” Coltart said.

“I don’t think he will reject the reassignment because he is someone who can do well in that portfolio as he is respected in the region.”

Constitutional law expert Lovemore Madhuku claimed Ncube’s reshuffle would require the endorsement of President Robert Mugabe.

“There are only two options available in this case; that DPM Mutambara has to resign or else President Mugabe has to dismiss him. If Mutambara refuses to go and President Mugabe does not dismiss him, there is nothing Ncube can do,” Madhuku claimed.

“What if President Mugabe says I cannot dismiss Mutambara because he is competent in government and has only lost a mere party election? It’s (Mugabe’s) constitutional right and there is nothing Ncube can do about that.”

But Professor Jonathan Moyo of Zanu PF said the “political reality” was that Mutambara had to accept the demotion to remain a “credible politician”.

“It is in his interest to remain cool because in that case he may be a recipient of God’s mercy. He may be surprised to get many opportunities including being invited by other parties,” he said.

“He should accept with humility serving as Regional Integration Minister because Prof Ncube just wants to provoke him into leaving the post so that he can replace him with one of his own cronies.”

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Mutambara demoted to make way for Ncube

SW Radio Africa

25 January 2011

Two weeks after saying Arthur Mutambara would continue to be Deputy Prime Minister, Professor Welshman Ncube on Sunday announced that he was now the new deputy premier, having taken over from the man he toppled as party leader.

Immediately after taking over from Mutambara as party leader two weeks ago Ncube claimed; “Professor Mutambara will continue to be the Deputy Prime Minister. We have agreed that we are not going to redeploy him, as we want to continue tapping from his skills.” All that however changed on Sunday after a meeting of the National Standing Committee of the party.

Mutambara was ‘redeployed’ to become the Minister of Regional Integration and International Co-operation, a position held by Ncube’s close ally Priscilla Misihairabwi-Mushonga, who now takes over from Ncube as Minister of Industry and Commerce. Mutambara has so far maintained what he hopes is a ‘dignified silence’ and avoided fueling the speculation around his true feelings on the matter.

“The feeling of the committee was that the office of the DPM should be occupied by the party’s most senior official. This should not be viewed as a demotion. It’s only that we are new to democracy. It happens in a democracy. If at one time you lead, the next you follow,” Ncube is quoted as saying over the weekend.

The big irony of the democracy that Ncube talks about is that all three leaders who rotated positions over the weekend – Ncube, Mushonga and Mutambara – are all unelected politicians who lost elections in their parliamentary constituencies.

In the March 2008 poll Ncube, who got 2,475 votes, lost to current Deputy Prime Minister (MDC-T) Thokozani Khupe who got 4,123 votes in Makokoba. Mushonga withdrew from the Glen View contest but her replacement, Kudzanai Mashumba lost. Mutambara was the biggest casualty in the Zengeza East constituency, getting 1,322 votes to Alexio Masundure (MDC-T) who got 7,570 votes.

Meanwhile Misihairabwi-Mushonga is now the party’s lead negotiator in the GPA, alongside Qhubani Moyo, the party’s national organising secretary. Education Minister Senator David Coltart and the co-Minister in the Organ on National Healing, Moses Mzila Ndlovu the only two elected legislators, retained their portfolios. It’s now expected the MDC-N will wait for ZANU PF leader Robert Mugabe to swear in the officials into their reshuffled positions.

Meanwhile thirteen disgruntled party rebels last week filed a High Court application to have the congress that elected Ncube as party leader, invalidated. Led by former National Chairman Jobert Mudzumwe, the group is accusing Ncube of violating the constitution by failing to properly inform the different provinces and districts on when the congress was supposed to be held.

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Will Mutambara Accept Demotion Or Quit Government?

Radio VOP

25 January 2011

HARARE, January 25, 2011- Deputy Prime Minister Arthur Mutambara could quit Government following moves by his party, the MDC-N to re-assign him to a ministerial post on Sunday, according to The Herald.

The new party leader, announced on Sunday that Mutambara would be re-deployed to the Regional Integration and International Co-operation portfolio.However, indications are the robotics and mechatronics professor will not accept the position and would choose to quit government.

He has kept his cards close to his chest since the acrimonious congress deposed him early this month.Senior politicians and Government officials yesterday said the suddenly reclusive Mutambara had told his confidantes that he was assessing the situation and would soon make a public statement on his intentions.

Last night, a senior government official said Mutambara flew out of Harare on Sunday evening and was attending the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.The official met Mutambara on Sunday, but would not be drawn into saying what they discussed.

“He will comment when he comes back. It’s better to hear it from the horse’s mouth,” he said.Another source disclosed that Mutambara met several senior government officials, oddly none of them from MDC-N, on Sunday.

“What they discussed is up to them to divulge but it appears Mutambara is taking things in stride and is more disappointed than he is angry with what is going on,” said the source. But David Coltart, one of the three MDC-N leaders who sit in the cabinet said he did not know what Prof Mutambara was planning.

“I was not there at the meeting (on Sunday) when the decision was made and I don’t know if he has been formally informed of the reassignment.

“I don’t think he will reject the reassignment because he is someone who can do well in that portfolio as he is respected in the region.”

An official who has worked with Prof Mutambara since he was appointed DPM in 2009, told The Herald that the former MDC leader was not “worried about the future”.

“He has other options outside of government and MDC-N and is not bothered by what the new leader is doing.”

It is not clear what these options are but there is speculation that he might go back full time into private consultancy, or join another party or form one of his own. Mutambara’s silence has led to a lot of conjecture as to what he is thinking and plotting, after having entered national politics in 2006 when he was invited to lead the MDC formation that had the previous year broken away from the one led by Mr Morgan Tsvangirai.

While Prof Ncube has said his party wants him to take over the deputy premiership, it is not a simple matter of reassigning Mutambara.

The constitution and the Global Political Agreement, which gave rise to the inclusive Government, make it clear that President Mugabe as the head of state and government – has the sole prerogative of hiring, reassigning or firing members of Cabinet.

All Prof Ncube can do is make a recommendation but the final decision lies with President Mugabe.Technically this means Mutambara could remain DPM at President Mugabe’s pleasure, or he could accept a reassignment that is effectively a demotion, or in the final extreme simply quit government.

Should he quit Government, he can put back on the robes of a private citizen or pursue other options as an active politician.Last year President Mugabe accepted a request from Prime Minister Tsvangirai for changes to the MDC-T line in government, a reshuffle apparently instigated by internal party strife.

Constitutional law expert Dr Lovemore Maduku yesterday said it was up to President Mugabe to oblige Ncube or dismiss his recommendations.

“There is no such thing as recalling, redeployment or reassigning in terms of the Constitution of Zimbabwe.

“There are only two options available; in this case that Mutambara has to resign or else President Mugabe has to dismiss him.

“If Mutambara refuses to go and President Mugabe does not dismiss him, there is nothing Ncube can do.

“What if President Mugabe says I cannot dismiss Mutambara because he is competent in government and has only lost a mere party election?

“It’s his (President Mugabe’s) constitutional right and there is nothing Ncube can do about that,” he said.Speculation is that Ncube is banking on Mutambara rejecting the demotion and quitting government so that he can then appoint MDC-N vice president, Mr Edwin Mushoriwa, as the Regional Integration Minister.

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Art Exhibit Stirs Up the Ghosts of Zimbabwe’s Past

New York Times

24 January 2011

By Celia Dugger

BULAWAYO, Zimbabwe — The exhibit at the National Gallery is now a crime scene, the artwork banned and the artist charged with insulting President Robert Mugabe. The picture windows that showcased graphic depictions of atrocities committed in the early years of Mr. Mugabe’s 30-year-long rule are now papered over with the yellowing pages of a state-controlled newspaper.

But the government’s efforts to bury history have instead provoked slumbering memories of the Gukurahundi, Zimbabwe’s name for the slaying and torture of thousands of civilians here in the Matabeleland region a quarter century ago.

“You can suppress art exhibits, plays and books, but you cannot remove the Gukurahundi from people’s hearts,” said Pathisa Nyathi, a historian here. “It is indelible.”

As Zimbabwe heads anxiously toward another election season, a recent survey by Afrobarometer has found that 70 percent of Zimbabweans are afraid they will be victims of political violence or intimidation, as thousands were in the 2008 elections. But an equal proportion want the voting to go forward this year nonetheless, evidence of their deep desire for democracy and the willingness of many to vote against Mr. Mugabe at great personal risk, analysts say.

In few places do such sentiments about violence in public life run as deep as here, and in recent months the government — whether through missteps or deliberate provocation — has rubbed them ever more raw.

Before the World Cup in South Africa in June, a minister in Mr. Mugabe’s party, ZANU-PF, invited the North Korean soccer team, on
behalf of Zimbabwe’s tourism authority, to base itself in Bulawayo before the games began, a gesture that roused a ferocious outcry.
After all, it was North Korea that trained and equipped the infamous Fifth Brigade, which historians estimate killed at least 10,000
civilians in the Ndebele minority between 1983 and 1987.

“To us it opened very old wounds,” Thabitha Khumalo, a member of Parliament, said of the attempt to bring the North Korean team to the Ndebele heartland. “We’re being reminded of the most horrible pain. How dare they? Our loved ones are still buried in pit latrines, mine shafts and shallow graves.”

Ms. Khumalo, interviewed while the invitation was still pending last year, wept as she summoned memories of the day that destroyed her family — Feb. 12, 1983.

She was 12 years old. She said soldiers from the Fifth Brigade, wearing jaunty red berets, came to her village and lined up her
family. One soldier slit open her pregnant aunt’s belly with a bayonet and yanked out the baby. She said her grandmother was forced to pound the fetus to a pulp in a mortar and pestle. Her father was made to rape his mother. Her uncles were shot point blank.

Such searing memories stoked protests, and in the end the North Korean team did not come to Zimbabwe. But feelings were further inflamed months later when the government erected a larger-than-life bronze statue of Joshua Nkomo — a liberation hero, an Ndebele and a rival to Mr. Mugabe — that, incredibly, was made in North Korea.

Last September, bowing to public outcry over the statue’s origin (and protests from Mr. Nkomo’s family that its plinth was too small), the statue was removed from a major intersection in Bulawayo. It now stands neglected in a weedy lot behind the Natural History Museum here.

Inside the museum hangs a portrait of a vigorous and dapper Mr. Mugabe in oversize glasses. He turns 87 next month. A massive stuffed crocodile, his family’s clan totem, dominates one gallery, its teeth long and sharp, its mouth agape. The signboard notes the crocodile’s lifespan exceeds 80 years.

Mr. Mugabe signed a pact with North Korea’s founder, Kim Il-sung, to train the infamous army brigade just months after Zimbabwe gained independence from white minority rule in 1980. Mr. Mugabe declared the brigade would be named “Gukurahundi” (pronounced guh-kura-HUN-di), which means “the rain that washes away the chaff before the spring rains.” He said it was needed to quell violent internal dissent, but historians say he used it to attack Mr. Nkomo’s political base and to impose one-party rule.
Mr. Mugabe’s press secretary, George Charamba, said the president had called the Gukurahundi “a moment of madness,” but asked whether Mr. Mugabe had apologized for the campaign, Mr. Charamba bristled.

“You can’t call it a moment of madness without critiquing your own past,” he said. “I hope people are not looking to humiliate the
president. I hope they’re just looking at allowing him to get by healing this nation. For us, that is uppermost. Our sense of
embitterment, our sense of recompense may not be exactly what you saw at Nuremburg.”

Downtown Bulawayo has the sleepy rhythms of a farm town, but the psychic wounds of the Gukurahundi fester beneath its placid surface. At the National Gallery here, the stately staircase leading to the shuttered Gukurahundi exhibit is now blocked by a sign that says “No Entry.” But the paintings, on walls saturated with blood-red paint, can still be glimpsed from the gallery above, through the bars of balconies. The paintings themselves seem to be jailed.

Voti Thebe, who heads the National Gallery, said the artist, Owen Maseko, created the Gukurahundi exhibit to contribute to
reconciliation. There was no money, so Mr. Maseko, 35, did it on his own time. He was just a boy at the time of the Gukurahundi, but he recalls the sounds of hovering helicopters and sirens.

“The memories are still there,” he said. “The victims are still alive. It’s not something we can just forget.”

In a large painting, a row of faces are shown with mouths open in wordless screams. In another, women and children weep what seem to be tears of blood. Three papier-mâché corpses, one hanging upside down, fill a picture window. Throughout the galleries are recurrent, menacing images of a man in oversize glasses — Mr. Mugabe.

The day after the exhibit opened last year, it was closed down. Mr. Maseko was detained, then transferred to prison in leg irons before
being released on bail. Mr. Maseko’s case awaits the Supreme Court’s attention. He is charged with insulting the president and
communicating falsehoods prejudicial to the state, a charge punishable by up to 20 years in prison.

David Coltart, a politician from Bulawayo who is education and arts minister in the power-sharing government of ZANU-PF and its political rivals, said he warned cabinet ministers that prosecuting Mr. Maseko could turn the case into a cause célèbre and inflame divisions. Mr. Coltart, who has long fought the Mugabe government, said he also appealed directly to Defense Minister Emmerson Mnangagwa, who was security minister during the Gukurahundi.

“It is only when nations grapple with their past, in its reality, not as a biased fiction, that they can start to deal with that past,” Mr.
Coltart said in a lecture delivered above Mr. Maseko’s show. He called the Gukurahundi “a politicide, if not a genocide.”

The Bulawayo playwright Cont Mhlanga knows the costs of free expression. His play “The Good President” was shut down on opening
night here in 2007 when baton-wielding riot police officers stormed the theater.

The lead character is a grandmother who lies to her two grandsons about the death of their father. He had been buried alive in the
Gukurahundi. But the boys, ignorant of the truth, become beneficiaries of the Mugabe government, one of them an abusive policeman, the other a recipient of seized farmland. The play’s title refers, Mr. Mhlanga said, to African leaders who call Mr. Mugabe a good president, “this man who has blood on his hands.”

Mr. Mhlanga says he feels “like someone has put huge pieces of tape over my mouth,” but insists that artists must express what people are terrified of saying.

“We live in a society where we’re so afraid, even of our own shadows,” he said. “To create democratic space in a society like ours, we have to deal with fear.”

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Mutambara demotion round up

The Zimbabwean

By Gift Phiri

Monday, 24 January 2011

HARARE – Deputy Prime Minister Arthur Mutambara has been demoted by the powerful 24-member MDC Standing Committee, which has assigned Professor Welshman Ncube to take up his post as the new Deputy Prime Minister.

Mutambara has been deployed to the ministry of Regional Intergration and International Cooperation, previously held by the new secretary general Priscilla Misihairabwi Mushonga, who replaces Ncube as minister of Industry and Commerce. Announcing the reshuffle after a marathon Standing Committee meeting held at the Holiday Inn in Harare Sunday, Ncube said his party has also recalled him from the Joint Monitoring and Implementation Committee, JOMIC, and from COPAC, where he was co chair to concentrate on his new post as Deputy Prime Minister.

“Prof Mutambara will be redeployed to the ministry of Regional Intergration and International Cooperation. I will be

deployed to the office of the deputy Prime Minister,” Ncube told the news conference Sunday. “Those are the decisions of the Standing Committee which have been communicated to the persons who are concerned and affected. As you know the prerogative of the Standing Committee is to deploy people as it has always done  in the past. So that’s basically what we have done in today’s meeting.”

Ncube declined to say how Mutambara had received the latest plan, but authoritative party sources said he was taking it very hard and that the robotics professor was apoplectic with fury. Mutambara was not immediately available for comment. But Ncube said: “Yes we have informed Prof Mutambara on the decision of the Standing Commitee. We hope that he, together with all the affected persons, will accept that position. He has been informed.

If you want further comment you can contact him. But we have done our part as a party in informing him.” Asked how Mutambara had reacted, Ncube retorted: “We didn’t have to take any reaction.” Asked if Mutambara accepted the demotion to the new position, Ncube said: “You have to ask him that question. The party deployed people and all loyal cadres get told by the party what assignment they have been given.” Ncube clarified that he was not yet DPM of Zimbabwe.

“You become the Deputy Prime Minister when you are properly sworn in into that position. All we are saying is that those

are the deployments that the party has made. Obviously we have to follow the adminstrative procedures to ensure that those decision are implemented. Needless to say the President is the one who does all the adminstrative procedures. We will of course inform his office in due course.”

Ncube declined to say whet he would do when “Mugabe performed a Bennett” on him. Mugabe has refused to accept the MDC T deployee Roy Bennett as deputy Agriculture minister. Ncube said: “We will have to wait until we cross that bridge.”

Ncube told the news conference that the Standing Committee was the first executive meeting after congress, and it naturally reviewed the persons that the party deployed two years ago to government.  “The standing committee decided that we will redeploy our government team as follows: first the deputy ministers will remain as they are with Makula remaining the deputy minister for Foreign Affairs with Tapela remaining the deputy minister of Higher Education and the deputy secretary general Moses Mzila-Ndlovu will remain deployed as minister of State in the Organ on National Healing and Reconciliation.”

President Mugabe in December adminstered the oath of office on the former deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs, Mzila-Ndlovu, as a Minister of National Healing and Reconciliation to replace the late MDC Vice President Gibson Sibanda, and also swore into office Rabson Robert Makula, to replace Mzila-Ndlovu as the new Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs.

“Minister Mushonga will be redeployed to the ministry of Industry and Commerce,” Ncube said, adding David Coltart stays as Education minister.

“He has done a very good job there there will be absolutely no reason for him to be reassigned. So he remains as Education minister.” Ncube announced further changes in deployees to other quasi-government functions: “Some of the decisions that we took are the following: as you know myself as the President, I also in my capacity as secretary general represented the party as one of the co-chairpersons at JOMIC.

The standing committee has decided that we should reassign that function to someone else and therefore Qubani Moyo, the national organising secretary will go to JOMIC as a member of JOMIC,” Ncube told reporters.

“The secretary general, minister Mushonga will become the co-chairperson at JOMIC. Then at COPAC, in the management committee of COPAC where I was one of the three co-chairpersons of COPAC, again the Standing Committee decided that I should be recalled, to use your term, from COPAC back to the party and that in my place Moses Mzila Ndlovu the deputy secretary general should be deployed in my position at COPAC and that again the secretary general who is already a member will take over and be one of the co-chairpersons at COPAC.”

Reacting to the legal challenge to the congess that installed him as party president, Ncube, a professor of law, said his party was glad the 13 individuals have decidede to petition the High Court “over what they think are anomalies” in the manner in which the June 8 congress was called.

“It was decided that we will vigorously oppose that application and indeed that we are happy that they have decided to make this a legal case rather than a political case because as a legal case it is very easy to resolve and we know we are on firm ground,” Ncube said. “We hope there will be decision soon which shows that everything around congress was done scrupulously in accordnace with the Constitution of the party and that that Constitution was followed.”

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Mutambara demoted

Newsday

By Mernat Mafirakurewa

January 24 2011

Embattled Deputy Prime Minister Arthur Mutambara was on Sunday redeployed to a less glamorous portfolio at the Ministry of Regional Integration and International Co-operation, paving way for newly-elected MDC president Welshman Ncube’s ascendancy to the position of Deputy Premier.

The recalling of Mutambara comes after concerted denials by Ncube, who assumed leadership of the party two weeks ago, that he was set to replace him as DPM.

“Professor Mutambara will continue to be the Deputy Prime Minister. We have agreed that we are not going to redeploy him, as we want to continue tapping from his skills,” said Ncube two weeks ago.

“We know that he has now become an ordinary card-carrying member of the party, but we still want to work with him as he will be taking instructions from the party and representing us in the GPA government.”

But, addressing a press conference in Harare yesterday after the meeting of the party’s National Standing Committee, MDC president Ncube said following extensive deliberations, the party had seen it fit to redeploy Mutambara and other senior party members.

“The feeling of the committee was that the office of the DPM should be occupied by the party’s most senior official,” said Ncube.

“This should not be viewed as a demotion. It’s only that we are new to democracy. It happens in a democracy. If at one time you lead, the next you follow.”

Regional Integration and International Co-operation minister Priscilla Misihairabwi-Mushonga takes over from Ncube as the Minister of Industry and Commerce.

Misihairabwi-Mushonga also becomes the lead negotiator for the party in the GPA together with Qhubani Moyo, the party’s national organising secretary.

Minister of Education, Arts, Sports and Culture David Coltart and the Co-Minister in the Organ on National Healing, Moses Ndlovu, retained their portfolios.

The redeployments however only become effective after the officials have been sworn-in by President Robert Mugabe.

Quizzed on how Mutambara had reacted upon receiving the news of the redeployment, Ncube said: “We have informed Mutambara and we hope he can accept the decision.

“The party deploys and it is hoped that all loyal cadres follow instructions of the party.”

Efforts to get a comment from Mutambara were fruitless at the time of going to print as his mobile phone was not reachable.

Ncube said he had initially objected to the proposal by the National Standing Committee given the concerns around the lifespan of the inclusive government.

“I had actually objected to the proposal but the party was of the view that even if I become a DPM for one day that should be the way it is,” he said.

A political party can recall any of its leaders from government if a resolution is passed to that effect.

The recall of former South African President Thabo Mbeki by the African National Congress is a case in point.

Mutambara was invited by party secretary-general Ncube to lead MDC-M in February 2006 following the split of the MDC in 2005 over participation in that year’s senate election called by Zanu PF.

Ncube said what was left was for the party to notify President Mugabe of the changes and they did not see any reason why he would refuse to accept the changes.

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Coltart in bid to change history

Sunday Mail

23 January 2011

FRESH allegations implicating Education, Sport, Arts and Culture Minister David Coltart in a plot to smuggle Western ideology into the country have emerged amid revelations that he has dumped key secondary textbooks for publications that contain dodgy political undertones.
It emerged last week that Senator Coltart intends to sideline Zimbabwean and African history to pave way for books that vaunt the exploits of the West.
It is understood he has also side-lined his Deputy, Cde Lazarus Dokora, and Permanent Secretary Dr Stephen Mahere in the procurement of the literature, which is scheduled to be distributed later this year.
Contacted for comment yesterday, Sen Coltart denied the allegations.
He said some subjects had been left out of the latest procurement because of inadequate funds.
“The money we got from the donors allowed us to purchase books for five core subjects. As a ministry, we agreed to purchase mathematics, science, indigenous languages, geography and English.
“However, history textbooks will be procured by Government funds which were availed in the National Budget by the Finance Minister.”
Sources told The Sunday Mail that he intends to clandestinely change the secondary school history syllabus by incorporating chapters that
glorify the “great role” that white settlers supposedly played in developing the country.
The sources said the exclusion of priority history and social studies books from the latest batch of literature was a clear indication of his motive.
It is understood the minister has been running the programme with an “inner clique” without the knowledge of his lieutenants. He first announced intentions to purchase new books for the country’s schools last year.
Senior officials in the ministry had agreed to purchase books for seven subjects. However, history and social studies were surreptitiously withdrawn from the list with fingers being pointed at the minister who later cited inadequate funding from the United Nations Children’s Fund (Unicef), the donor.

Unicef insiders last week refuted this claim, insisting the funds they had made available were sufficient for the programme. A senior official in the Ministry of Education, Sport, Arts and Culture said the minister sidelined a local publishing house, Zimbabwe Publishing House (ZPH), to clear the way for the implementation of his plan.
“The whole procurement exercise was carried out by Senator Coltart and three other officials close to him who are in the ministry without the
knowledge of his deputy, Mr Lazarus Dokora. “His ideology is to change the country’s historical background, and information at hand is that Senator Coltart is already proposing another History textbook written by an author in Central Africa, which he has been featuring on his website.”

Since Independence in 1980, secondary schools have always taught History based on the African Heritage and People Making History textbooks.

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Corporal punishment in schools inexcusable

Newsday

By Ropafadzo Mapimhidze

January 23 2011

It is almost a rhythmic pattern that every day, a school child is beaten by their teacher somewhere around Zimbabwe. Some are beaten so severely they have to seek medical attention.

Although no figures are yet available to substantiate the extent of this violence, media reports have shown that corporal punishment is still being meted out on pupils in violation of standing rules over the matter.

Children are beaten with sticks, whips, rulers, boards and many other objects from pre-school right up to high school.

Corporal punishment has been repeatedly shown to be ineffective with disastrous consequences.

A former Bernard Mizeki High School pupil who is now a lecturer at a local university said he was a victim of severe beatings by some of his teachers, a matter that still bothers him 15 years on.

“I was beaten for not polishing my shoes, unkempt hair or just being slow in doing my work. The beatings were so bad that I sometimes could not sit in my chair in class because of swollen buttocks,” he said.

“Those teachers are still around though not at that school anymore, but I dread to imagine what they are doing at the various schools that they were posted to. Parents should be made aware that child abuse in schools especially in boarding is rife.”

The lecturer fell short of divulging homosexual activities at boys only schools.

“That is something I don’t want to think about. It did happen,” he said.

In Mwenezi, a headmaster assaulted a schoolboy because he was found out of bounds and the child is in hospital with serious brain damage.

In another incident, a Chinhoyi High School student, Moreblessing Musiiwa, died after he was allegedly struck with a cricket bat by the school’s sports director, Joseph Mpala, while the caretaker, Lameck Katungunde, held him.

Recently, parents of a new grade one pupil at a school in Avondale complained that their child was assaulted by a teacher.

Reports from the school indicate that the woman involved was so frustrated with her work life, and her actions towards these innocent children was a way of venting out her anger.

A teacher from Dzivaresekwa in Harare who preferred to remain anonymous said most teachers were experiencing serious financial problems hence vented out their frustrations on schoolchildren.

“A parent once came to me and shouted at me for not marking her daughter’s homework. You see, I earn such little pay and I have lost all the desire for this work. I told her that if she was not happy with me, she would have to approach the school head about changing classes,” a teacher said.

“Most teachers are not happy about the incentives being offered because of the discrepancies across all schools in Zimbabwe. That is a fact that everybody should be made aware of.”

Education minister David Coltart said in a telephone interview recently he would soon be engaging the three teachers’ unions in a bid to abolish incentives when salary scales improve.

“Towards end of last year, we said we would wait and see whether the salary allocations would translate into substantial income and abolish incentives,” Coltart said.

“The sooner I can abolish incentives, the better but I can only do so when teachers have started receiving reasonable salaries.”

School authorities have been demanding the most absurd fees for various functions, a situation that has been created to ensure staff gets more incentives. But this has since become an extortion kind of game.

“When a parent fails to meet those obligations, the child suffers through either being sent back home or verbal assaults.

The school environment is no longer the place we thought was second to home in terms of safety.

School areas are no longer child friendly and we call on government to take action as a matter of urgency,” said another parent from Dzivaresekwa.

A schoolchild described recently how his teacher made him stand in the blazing sun for four hours because he had made noise in class.

“He told me to face directly into the sun and that really hurt. He went on to say I was one of the many children whose parents had not paid the extra amounts demanded to cushion teachers,” said Tawanda from a school in Highfield.

The United Nations Committee on the Rights of the Child found that “corporal punishment and other cruel or degrading forms of punishment are forms of violence and states must take all appropriate legislative, administrative, social and educational measures to eliminate them”.

Coltart said there is a statutory instrument that sets out when corporal punishment can be implemented and this is done in limited circumstances. He said anything done outside those parameters is illegal.

“Corporal punishment can only be done when a child has committed a very serious offence and corporal punishment is then implemented by certain authorities,” he said, adding that it is inexcusable for teachers to vent their anger on pupils.

Corporal punishment is violent and unnecessary as it may lower self-esteem. It is also liable to instill hostility and rage.

Research suggests that corporal punishment has no positive long-term effects. It instead introduces a whole mess of other complications including increased dropout rates.

Zimbabwe may be in violation of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child which Zimbabwe ratified on October 11, 1990. This convention abhors corporal punishment which now forms part of local statutes.

“Beating a child is a violation of human rights. That abuse haunts and hurts them forever. They grow up to be either aggressive or passive adults,” said a local psychologist.

A female teacher also noted: “I have never beaten any child. My eyes and voice do the job and I have successfully taught disciplined children who are leaders in their own right. They are our next generation heroes. ”

Efforts to get official comment from Secretary for Education Stephen Mahere were unsuccessful despite having sent the questions as per his request last Monday.

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Ex-teachers wooed back to school

Times Live

January 22, 2011

By Vladimir Mzaca

Henry Bala, a Bachelor of Arts graduate from a United Kingdom university, is back in the job market.

Bala, having served as an educationist for more than 20 years, retired from civil service in the mid 1990s.

“When I retired things were not bad economically. I was comfortable to go to my rural home in Plumtree,” he said.

Bala’s return to teaching came after a public plea by the Ministry of Education Sports and Culture to try to revive the teaching profession.

In 2009 the Progressive Teachers Union of Zimbabwe said about 20 000 teachers had migrated to neighbouring states.

When David Coltart took over the ministry in 2009 he offered amnesty to all teachers who had left the country. The move was to get them back into the system to rekindle the education sector.

“We gave amnesty to teachers who had left. Some of them had even left teaching totally but we had to start somewhere. This has helped in at least giving life to the sector,” said Coltart.

In the past two years the ministry managed to get a few thousand teachers back into the profession.

However, there are still 21000 vacancies, and rural schools are still under- staffed as working conditions and remunerations are not enticing.

In light of this the ministry has started calling back from retirement teachers such as Bala.

“We are engaging teachers from the old school. Retired teachers have been approached and they are free to approach us.

”They can teach for as many years as they want. The response is huge,” said Coltart.

“It is better than doing nothing at home. Our pensions were eroded during the Zimbabwean-dollar era,” said Bala.

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Dabengwa says Nabanyama murder still worries him

SW Radio Africa

20 January 2011

The president of the revived Zimbabwe African People’s Party (ZAPU) Dumiso Dabengwa (Pictured) has said the kidnapping and later disappearance of MDC polling agent Patrick Nabanyama in June 2000 still worries him to this day.

In a wide ranging interview on SW Radio Africa’s Question Time, Dabengwa said ‘much as I want to find a solution to the disappearance of Nabanyama, it happened in actual fact when I was Minister of Home Affairs and I think I did everything possible to find out what actually happened. I was not able; the police were not able to come up with any solution.’

Nabanyama was an election agent for current Education Minister Senator David Coltart and was abducted from his home. Stanley Ncube, Ephraim Moyo, Julius Sibanda and Simon Rwodzi were initially charged with kidnapping. The four allegedly took him to the home of war veteran Cain Nkala and he was never seen again. Nkala was later murdered amid reports he wanted to come clean on the case.

‘I think those that are responsible were smart enough to ensure that they did not have leave any marks because they could not be traced,’ Dabengwa said. Because Nabanyama’s body has still not been found, it was also not possible to charge the four with murder. In their defence the four accused said they only took Nabanyama to the home of Cain Nkala and what happened to him after that they did not know.

Last year Senator Coltart told the Newsday newspaper that “the problem that we face in this case is that the accused persons were never charged with kidnapping as that offence was covered by the amnesty pronounced by President Robert Mugabe in 2001. Despite the fact that the kidnapping case was rock solid, they evaded prosecution because of the amnesty, which as far as I know is still in place.”

On Thursday Dabengwa told us he met one of the people accused of murdering Nabanyama and they repeated the same position that they didn’t know what happened to him after they handed him to Nkala. Asked if the state had a hand in the murders and this being the reason why no one has been pursued seriously Dabengwa said “it’s possible and one would be led to conclude that way.”

Because Nabanyama’s body has not been found for more than 7 years a Bulawayo provincial magistrate last year in October declared him dead. His widow Patricia is still fighting to have the abductors charged with murder. Although the Attorney General Johannes Tomana has declined to prosecute he is still refusing to issue a certificate that will allow lawyers to carry out a private prosecution.

Don’t miss the full interview with Dumiso Dabengwa to be broadcast Wednesday 26/01/11 on Question Time. Lance questions him on working with Mugabe, seized ZAPU properties, any possible alliances with Tsvangirai, targeted sanctions, land redistribution, war vets leader Jabulani Sibanda and his campaign of terror, his remarks in 2000 that the MDC would win an election even if they fielded a donkey as a candidate and many other questions from listeners.

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