Cultural cricketers gather in Scotland

www.cricketscotland.com

9 August 2010


In Tales from Afghanistan on Sunday 15 August, Magnus Linklater is in discussion with James Fergusson, author of Taliban and former Sunday Times Foreign Correspondent, and Tim Albone, director of Out of the Ashes, a film that captures the uplifting story about the Afghan cricket’s team, and hears their views about what lies in store for Afghanistan, its people and the West’s presence in the country.

Later the same day, former Zimbabwe cricket captain Henry Olonga joins David Coltart, Zimbabwe’s Minister of Culture, and Andy Thompson, director of the film Mugabe, to discuss with Magnus Linklater the topic Where now for Zimbabwe?

Then, to round off the cricketing feast, you can watch the Out of the Ashes film itself, in the Film Gallery at Traquair House, preceded by a short film from Afghan Connection.

Meanwhile, to understand how the Zimbabwean media is treating the subject of cricket, you might also wish to read the report in last week’s Zimbabwe Independent about Scotland’s scheduled I-Cup match next month, and where it will be played: click HERE to read it.

And, since we are talking matters cultural, what about taking in Balamory‘s Archie the Inventor – aka comedian Miles Jupp – at the Edinburgh Festival? Here’s what Andrew Miller wrote about him on cricinfo recently:

Sitting in the Oval crowd on the final day of the Ashes in 2005, the comedian Miles Jupp experienced a “Damascene moment”. Down on his luck in his chosen career, and jealously observing the lucky few who were being paid to watch the sport he loved, he decided he would chance his arm at something completely different – and resolved to become a cricket journalist.

“Joining the press corps seemed like the perfect job,” said Jupp. “The more I thought about it, the more romantic my vision of life inside that world became: a clubby and convivial group of cricket lovers travelling the world together, watching the game and sharing stories about it, working and hunting as a pack.”

And so, with that idyllic vision in mind, he set his sights on England’s tour of India in February and March 2006, and even managed to extract vague promises of work via his contacts at the BBC and The Western Mail. However, upon arrival, he found himself completely out on a limb.

“I was left in India for a month with no pass, no work and the monumental task of looking busy,” he said. “It is incredibly hard to look busy when you have absolutely nothing to do. It is frowned upon to make excited, girly noises when a famous player is standing near you. And it is difficult to be taken seriously as a cricket journalist when more and more of your colleagues in the press box start noticing that you look a lot like one of the actors in the children’s television series Balamory.”

The net result, however, was to furnish Jupp with a stock of raw material which he has now taken back to his original career as a stand-up comic. “It was a month in which I was sometimes embarrassed, humiliated, self-conscious, bored, lonely or horribly sick,” he added. “But also at other times I was excited, accepted, joyful, got to mix with my heroes and learned to understand my relationship with the game.”

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Senator David Coltart’s Opening Speech at The Official Opening Of The Exhibition Of Zimbabwean Stone Sculpture in China

It gives me a great sense of honour and pride to address this august gathering on the occasion of “African Cultures in Focus 2010” —Zimbabwe Culture Week and the Exhibition of Zimbabwean Stone Sculpture, especially when this Exhibition of Zimbabwean Stone Sculpture is held in a foreign land.

At the outset however please would you accept our condolences with regard to the loss of life and suffering which has taken place this week in Gansu Province, indeed not far from here, as a result of the flood and mud slide which hit on Saturday. I know I speak on behalf of the whole nation of Zimbabwe when I say how sorry we are that this tragedy has befallen your people at this time. Our thoughts and prayers are with all the victims, their families and also the rescue teams.

This Exhibition clearly shows how the great nation of the People’s Republic of China values Zimbabwean culture and in particular our Sculpture. For that, I would like to pay tribute to the people of the People’s Republic of China and congratulate them for successfully organizing the Zimbabwe Culture Week and this Exhibition.

I am also excited to be part of this gathering because Zimbabwe is participating at this Exhibition for the first time ever. Zimbabwe’s participation here further strengthens and broadens the bilateral relations in the arts and culture that exist between our two great nations. Politically and economically, our two countries have been cooperating since the days of Zimbabwe’s struggle for independence and self determination. However, the area of culture has not been taken seriously as we witness today.

The country’s name, Zimbabwe means the House of Stone. The Great Zimbabwe structures located near Masvingo—one of Zimbabwe’s five cities-were built from beautifully and skillfully sculptured stones. So the country has a strong legacy of stone carving tradition.

As a result of this stone carving tradition, stone carving skills are very well developed in my country. Taking cognisance of this, the white minority government of that time opened a National Gallery in 1957 that provided a welcome stimulus to the then present and would-be sculptors. From then on sculpture began to take root in the country. The National Gallery did a great deal to market the work of artists in sculpture during the 1960s and 1970s.

By the time of the attainment of Independence in 1980, a number of excellent sculptors existed in the country and their acclaim was such that Zimbabwe was at that time identified as the home of 4 out of 5 of the best sculptors in the world. By then the most successful and sought after sculptors included brothers John and Bernard Takawira, Bernard Matemera, Henry Munyaradzi and Nicholas Mukomberanwa among others.

These artists produced innovative and ground-breaking work for many years while taking time also to pass on their skills and expertise to a younger generation. As a result many publications were produced analyzing and interrogating their works while, at the same time, the works were being shown all over the world to continue critical acclaim. Generally the works focused on ontological themes that explored traditional life and beliefs. These works were largely well finished, polished and compact in form.

From the nineteen eighties a new younger breed of sculptors began to take centre stage. Most of these artists had received informal training from established artists and they began to produce new work making use of the abundant stone deposits in the country as raw materials. However, their work was more secular in nature and more concerned with social issues and the transition that was taking place from the traditional African world outlook to a modern one that draws on diverse subject matters and even culture. This generation of artists received little formal training and include such artists as Tapfuma Gutsa, Joseph Muzondo, Brighton Sango, Colleen Madamombe among others.

Although the nature of the production is largely a male preserve several female sculptors have established a niche in this field producing works that represent softer and more feminine imagery while exploring female issues such as various roles that women play in society. Artists like Agnes Nyanhongo and the late Colleen Madamombe have put the female sculptors firmly on the map.

It should be noted, however, that stone sculpture has changed over the last ten years with the introduction of other materials alongside the use of stone.  These are mixed media sculptures.

Let me conclude, Ladies and Gentlemen, by thanking the People’s Republic of China for inviting me to this exhibition, the organisers of this event, the artists who produced these pieces of work, the exhibitors and the general public who have come to see the works for without them the event would have been a non event.

Zimbabwe has been a negative brand for the last few decades because of our internal political turmoil. With the advent of the new transitional government in February 2009, we are trying to create a new positive brand for Zimbabwe. Our art has always been a constructive and positive feature of our society and so its promotion internationally is a critical component of this rebranding exercise. Accordingly, events such as this exhibition go way beyond art and culture and are an important step in assisting us stabilize and rebuild Zimbabwe, just as you have done in your great nation since 1978.

I trust that the Zimbabwe Culture Week and 2010 Exhibition of Zimbabwean Stone Sculpture will be a great success and that it will further strengthen relations between our Nations.

I thank you

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Education Transition Fund Sensitisation

www.unicef.org

by Tapuwa L. Mutseyekwa

4 August 2010

For most people in Zimbabwe, the expression of joy and happiness are best done through music and drama. It was in this spirit that children in Bulawayo inundated the first sensitisation ceremony of the Education Transition Fund (ETF) with an array of drama, song, poem and dance.

In a dramatisation act of the their school life before and after the roll out of the ETF in Zimbabwe, children at Mpumelelo Primary school showed the misery of having limited learning resources and the new found joy with the arrival of materials provided under ETF programme.

“This atmosphere of joy and celebration is a correct expression of how children are feeling today,” said the school headmistress Mrs. Priscilla Chibelu. “At one time it was a miserable experience to come to school, because for most children there were no learning materials to benefit form” said Mrs. Chibelu.

Indeed, many schools are moving beyond these grim days as UNICEF and the inclusive Government of Zimbabwe work towards meeting the pledge made in September 2009 to supply all 5,300 primary schools with stationery and textbooks. Already, most schools have had the stationery supplies of writing books, chalks, pens and pencils delivered to their schools.  Steel cabinets to be used for the storage of these supplies have also been delivered while more than 60% of the textbooks have already been printed and await the commencement of the distribution process.

Speaking on behalf of the UNICEF Representative Dr. Peter Salama, UNICEF Chief of Communication, Ms. Micaela Marques De Sousa said UNICEF remained committed to ensuring quality education for all Zimbabwe’s children and urged parents to share the vision of protecting children’s education.

“We are cognizant of the fact that textbooks, learning materials and supplies are necessary, but they remain tentative steps towards attaining quality and improving access to education”, she said “Unless we successfully mobilise communities, parents, teachers and learners to work together and share the vision and ambition of the Education Transition Fund Programme, we will not achieve much”.

While most of the schools in Zimbabwe have received their stationery, it is calculated that by the beginning of 2011, every primary school student will be in possession of a textbook in all the four core subjects, including books printed in the minority indigenous languages such as Venda and Tonga.  The Minister of Education, Sports, Arts and Culture, Sen. David Coltart highlighted that the next step in the revitilisation of the education sector is to respond to the needs of the teachers, including their remuneration, accommodation and other basic needs.

“We applaud the dedication and commitment that our teachers continue to display”, said Sen. Coltart. “Most of them, particularly those in the rural areas, live in very squalid conditions and continue to live on a very minimal pay, but they remain committed to their duty.

Over the last decade, Zimbabwe’s education sector has seriously been affected by limited resources to replenish stationery and textbooks stocks. Coupled with the difficulty in awarding teachers attractive salaries, learning had come to a near halt in most schools. Over the next three months, sensitisation and awareness programmes will be rolled out in all the ten provinces of the country alerting parents and communities of how ETF is set to restore the lost glory in the education sector.

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Ministry proposes improvements to teachers’ conditions

Newsday

by Staff Writer

3 August 2010

Education, Sport, Art and Culture ministry has submitted proposals to Cabinet to improve salaries and other working conditions of teachers, a minister has said.

Education minister David Coltart announced this during a workshop at Mpumelelo Primary School in Mpopoma, Bulawayo, last week. He was speaking on the $52 million Education Transition Fund which has seen the production of 13 million textbooks for primary school children in the country.

He said apart from the supply of textbooks and other learning materials, the improvement of conditions of service of teachers was critical for the success of the education revival programme.

Coltart said he last week submitted a plan drawn up by his ministry to address the issue of teachers’ welfare and Cabinet was expected to debate on the matter soon.

“I can’t divulge the contents of the plan,” Coltart said. “However, apart from the provision of textbooks, the plight of teachers, who have played an important role under exceptionally difficult circumstances, is covered.”

Coltart said teachers were getting salaries that were way below what they should be receiving but most of them had remained loyal to the profession.

He said apart from proposals on salaries, the ministry was also seeking to improve teachers’ accommodation, especially in rural areas where most teachers lived in “squalid conditions”. Coltart was recently in Britain where he addressed an international conference on the challenges the education sector in Zimbabwe. “It is clear that government does not have sufficient resources to stabilise the education sector in Zimbabwe,’’ he said.

The minister said despite numerous problems spawned by the system of teacher incentives paid by parents, he did not feel persuaded to stop the practice.

Coltart said stopping incentives would be a “populist move” but would seriously “haemorrhage” the education sector. He said incentives were a form of supplementary income for teachers to “stem” the mass exodus of these professionals. Coltart said between 2007 and 2008, Zimbabwe lost about 20 000 teachers, mostly to neighbouring countries.

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Ministry proposes improvement of teachers’ lot

Newsday

By Staff Writer

2 August 2010


Education, Sport, Art and Culture ministry has submitted proposals to Cabinet to improve salaries and other working conditions of teachers, a minister has said.

Education minister David Coltart announced this during a workshop at Mpumelelo Primary School in Mpopoma, Bulawayo, last week. He was speaking on the $52 million Education Transition Fund which has seen the production of 13 million textbooks for primary school children in the country.

He said apart from the supply of textbooks and other learning materials, the improvement of conditions of service of teachers was critical for the success of the education revival programme.

Coltart said he last week submitted a plan drawn up by his ministry to address the issue of teachers’ welfare and Cabinet was expected to debate on the matter soon.

“I can’t divulge the contents of the plan,” Coltart said. “However, apart from the provision of textbooks, the plight of teachers, who have played an important role under exceptionally difficult circumstances, is covered.”

Coltart said teachers were getting salaries that were way below what they should be receiving but most of them had remained loyal to the profession.

He said apart from proposals on salaries, the ministry was also seeking to improve teachers’ accommodation, especially in rural areas where most teachers lived in “squalid conditions”. Coltart was recently in Britain where he addressed an international conference on the challenges the education sector in Zimbabwe. “It is clear that government does not have sufficient resources to stabilise the education sector in Zimbabwe,’’ he said.

The minister said despite numerous problems spawned by the system of teacher incentives paid by parents, he did not feel persuaded to stop the practice.

Coltart said stopping incentives would be a “populist move” but would seriously “haemorrhage” the education sector. He said incentives were a form of supplementary income for teachers to “stem” the mass exodus of these professionals. Coltart said between 2007 and 2008, Zimbabwe lost about 20 000 teachers, mostly to neighbouring countries.

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Ministry proposes improvement of teachers’ lot

Newsday

By Staff Writer

2 August 2010

Education, Sport, Art and Culture ministry has submitted proposals to Cabinet to improve salaries and other working conditions of teachers, a minister has said.

Education minister David Coltart announced this during a workshop at Mpumelelo Primary School in Mpopoma, Bulawayo, last week. He was speaking on the $52 million Education Transition Fund which has seen the production of 13 million textbooks for primary school children in the country.

He said apart from the supply of textbooks and other learning materials, the improvement of conditions of service of teachers was critical for the success of the education revival programme.

Coltart said he last week submitted a plan drawn up by his ministry to address the issue of teachers’ welfare and Cabinet was expected to debate on the matter soon.

“I can’t divulge the contents of the plan,” Coltart said. “However, apart from the provision of textbooks, the plight of teachers, who have played an important role under exceptionally difficult circumstances, is covered.”

Coltart said teachers were getting salaries that were way below what they should be receiving but most of them had remained loyal to the profession.

He said apart from proposals on salaries, the ministry was also seeking to improve teachers’ accommodation, especially in rural areas where most teachers lived in “squalid conditions”. Coltart was recently in Britain where he addressed an international conference on the challenges the education sector in Zimbabwe. “It is clear that government does not have sufficient resources to stabilise the education sector in Zimbabwe,’’ he said.

The minister said despite numerous problems spawned by the system of teacher incentives paid by parents, he did not feel persuaded to stop the practice.

Coltart said stopping incentives would be a “populist move” but would seriously “haemorrhage” the education sector. He said incentives were a form of supplementary income for teachers to “stem” the mass exodus of these professionals. Coltart said between 2007 and 2008, Zimbabwe lost about 20 000 teachers, mostly to neighbouring countries.

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Zimbabwe Human Rights – lest we forget

Letter from Zimbabwe Human Rights NGO Forum

01 Aug 2010

Dear Friends,

Tonight, 30.07.2010, the Forum will launch, at a high profile event in Bulawayo, the second volume of our “Taking Transitional Justice to the People Outreach Report”. The launch will take place this evening at 6.00pm in the Bulawayo Rainbow Hotel. Key speakers will include Hon. Senator David Coltart, Zimbabwe’s Minister of Education, Sport, Art and Culture and Hon.Gordon Moyo who will officially launch the report.

The Outreach Report sets out the experiences of the Zimbabwe Human Rights NGO Forum, its members and associates, who conducted community-based outreach meetings on transitional justice. The report gives a brief background to transitional justice in Zimbabwe and the rationale for the Forum’s involvement in the process. It describes the methodology used at the meetings and the challenges experienced by the facilitators. The overriding plea of the participants was for truth recovery and truth disclosure to redress past human rights abuses and work towards national reconciliation. The Forum’s Press Release, issued today, and the programme for tonight’s launch can be accessed via the following link: http://www.hrforumzim.com/frames/inside_frame_press.htm and scheduled programme on: http://www.hrforumzim.com/taking-transitional-justice-to-the-people.pdf

Our “Taking Transitional Justice to the People Outreach Report” will be available to read in full on our website after tonight’s launch. We will remind you by providing a link in our next mailing.

Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR) issued the attached HRDs Alert on 29.07.2010. It contains news of the harassment and detention of a Banket Town Councillor and a charge laid against MDC official for allegedly publishing or communicating false statements prejudicial to the state.

The Zimbabwe Human Rights Association (ZimRights) has released the attached items in recent days:

· Today (30.07 2010), the attached Constitutional Bulletin reports on Day 30 of the constitutional outreach process.

· On 28.07.2010 ZimRights issued the attached Constitutional Bulletin reporting on Day 29 of the outreach process.

· Further reports issued on 27.07.2010 on Day 28 of the outreach process are contained in the attached ZimRights Constitutional Bulletin

· The attached Newsflash of 29.07.2010 contains a report of a workshop with the farming community to raise awareness noting particularly the need to protect farm workers from being exploited through low wages and women from gender-based violence and other forms of abuse. ZimRights also encouraged the workers to participate in the ongoing constitution-making process.

· The attached Newsflash of 28.07.2010 highlights the recent ZimRights launch of a peace-building project with traditional leaders as essential players in peace building though the influence that they have on activities that take place in their respective communities.

· The attached Newsflash dated 27.07.2010 reports on a public meeting in Masvingo to raise awareness on torture and its different forms through individual testimony and discussion. Participants recommended that ZimRights set up a local office to enable people to report cases relating to torture and other human rights abuses.

Today, 30.07.2010 the Media Monitoring Project of Zimbabwe (MMPZ) issued the attached ‘Weekly Media Review’ (Issue 28) which, amongst other issues, looks at the continued broadcast of ZANU PF publicity songs and the recent unilateral appointment by Mugabe of six ambassadors at Zimbabwe’s missions abroad.

The Civil Society Monitoring Mechanism (CISOMM) released which monitors the compliance of the inclusive government of the Global Political Agreement in the period May-July. Amongst many other items, the report highlights that human rights violations committed by the police and other security services is still prevalent and that unlawful arrests and detentions of civil society activists and political actors has continues. There are also worrying findings about the failure of the inclusive government to do anything for internally displaced people, the denial of food aid on political grounds and the withholding of food handouts from inmates’ relatives at Chikarubi Maximum Prison.


Today, 30.07.2010 the Solidarity Peace Trust (SPT) launches a report entitled “A Fractured Nation: Operation Murambatsvina – five years on” and an accompanying film (“Poverty on Top of Poverty”) looking specifically at Hopley farm. The report provides an assessment of the effects of Operation Murambatsvina five years by analyzing the combined effects of the Operation and the economic meltdown in the years that followed. To access the report and film please see the following link: http://www.solidaritypeacetrust.org/

The attached Press Release of 29.07.2010 contains the adopted decisions of the African Union’s (AU) 15^th Summit held in Kampala, Uganda from 19-27.07.2010 under the theme “Maternal, Infant and Child Health and Development in Africa. The Summit urged member states to embrace the AU’s ‘Year for Peace and Security in Africa’ by signing and ratifying all relevant AU instruments, including the Charter on Democracy, Elections and Good Governance.

On 28.07.2010 the Bulawayo Agenda issued the attached ‘Daily Agenda’ with news and updates on the constitution-making process. It provides a summary of the constitutional outreach activities including the abolishment of the death penalty, the need for the Government to provide social welfare to disabled persons and also on the issue of a Bill of Rights superficially calling for the codification of the second-generation of right to healthcare.

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U Tube link to David Coltart’s interview on BBC Hardtalk originally aired on 20 July 2010

U Tube

29 July 2010

Stephen Sackur asks David Coltart the hard questions on what the GPA has done for Zimbabwe. (There are 3 parts to the interview on Youtube)

BBC Hard Talk on Zimbabwe 1of3

www.youtube.com

Interview of David Coltart, Zimbabwean cabinet minister.

Cut and paste this link:

http://www.facebook.com/l.php?u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.youtube.com%2Fwatch%3Fv%3DUwSd4QAmX4Y&h=eed93

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Building a Jerusalem in Zimbabwe’s green and pleasant land

The Guardian

By David Smith

29 July 2010

Place names, schools, eloquent oratories and, of course, cricket can make Zimbabwe seem the most English of African countries

High tea and cakes to the strains of a grand piano. Rooms with names such as Balmoral, Edinburgh, Windsor, Mirabelle and Edward & Connaught. An oak-panelled grill that recalls a gentlemen’s club on Pall Mall.

Yes, it must be Zimbabwe again.

The Meikles in Harare claims to be the country’s best hotel, and it certainly seems to have dodged the economic bullets of recent years. Its colonial aura, with regal tapestries and framed black and white photos of Harare a century ago, would probably console the establishment’s founder, Thomas Meikle, a Scottish immigrant.

To me too it felt reassuringly, and alarmingly, like home. One night there I switched on Zimbabwe state television to discover, amid controversial jingles extolling President Robert Mugabe, a developing crisis for Siegfried and Tristan in a rerun of All Creatures Great and Small.

Only a few buildings from the era of empire survive in Harare, formerly Salisbury, but there are also parks and tree-lined avenues that feel somehow familiar. In the east of the country, near Mutare, the best place to stop to admire the scenery is Prince of Wales View.

It might be 30 years since independence, but Britain remains in the cultural DNA. O-levels and A-levels are still studied. St George’s College and Prince Edward are the leading schools, with much that evokes Harry Potter’s Hogwarts or Billy Bunter’s Greyfriars. English, the official language, is not only widely spoken, but spoken very well.

I have attended public events where black Zimbabweans deliver speeches with an ornate eloquence, or sometimes grandiloquence, that seems more Victorian literary salon than oppressive African dictatorship. Theirs is a language no longer spoken by the British.

Mugabe, self-declared nemesis of the evil former empire, is no exception to this. His speeches are finely polished and buffed in the colonisers’ tongue: “If yesterday I fought you as an enemy, today you have become a friend. If yesterday you hated me, today you cannot avoid the love that binds you to me, and me to you.”

Heidi Holland, author of Dinner with Mugabe, recalls being handed tea in an exquisite English porcelain cup by a waiter in white gloves and tails while waiting at the State House to interview the president in 2007.

Last year in a speech entitled The Britishness of Mugabe, she spoke of how he has dressed all his life in austere suits of the stereotypical English gentleman, polished his vowels self-consciously and developed something of a British sense of humour.

Holland said: “What most revealed Mugabe’s fragmented identity to me, though, were the tears glistening in his eyes when he talked about Britain’s royals. The Queen and her four children, her sister and her mother had all stayed with him at State House, he told me. ‘And now, to this day, we treasure those moments, and we have nothing against the royal family,’ he continued – using the royal ‘We’.”

His love for Savile Row tailors is matched by a love for that most English of games: cricket. Mugabe, patron of Zimbabwe Cricket (ZC), once declared: “Cricket civilises people and creates good gentlemen. I want everyone to play cricket in Zimbabwe; I want ours to be a nation of gentlemen.”

Now, after years in the doldrums, there are signs of the sport coming back to life here. A recent domestic Twenty20 tournament was televised and brought in multiracial crowds of more than 7,000 and corporate sponsors otherwise starved of entertainment. A Pop Idol-style contest toured the country inviting all comers to prove they could be Zimbabwe’s fast bowling star of the future.

The national team is also on the up. Alan Butcher, a former England batsman, is now the coach of a side, no longer dominated by white players, that has claimed the one-day scalps of the West Indies, India and Sri Lanka. Zimbabwe is looking to return to Test cricket for the first time since 2006 with a home series against Bangladesh next year.

Some hope this could be the catalyst for wider social recovery. But there’s no escaping politics. In 2003 two of Zimbabwe’s finest players, Andy Flower and Henry Olonga, wore black armbands at the World Cup to mourn the death of democracy. The men in charge of the game have notoriously had ties with Mugabe.

Ozias Bvute, managing director of ZC, is on the EU’s banned list owing to alleged associations with Mugabe’s Zanu-PF party. Recently I found Bvute in a freshly painted office, complete with satellite TV and Wi-Fi internet access, that some may find suspiciously plush for a country in which many government buildings are shabby and threadbare. But he insisted he is no tool of Mugabe.

“I woke up one day and was told I was on the sanctions list,” he said. “I read, ‘These are the people responsible for the tragedy of Zimbabwe.’ I read that cricket is a political instrument. This is a myth. I do not hold any card from any political party. It’s like the ANC in South Africa: 70% of individuals here have had associations with Zanu-PF. It’s a small society. We know each other.”

Certainly David Coltart, the Movement for Democratic Change’s sports minister, and a cricket fanatic, seemed untroubled. He told me: “There are people in the administration in influential places who are aligned with Zanu-PF, but I’m in a cabinet chaired by Robert Mugabe.

“In the first four or five years post-Nelson Mandela’s release, there were many people in the South African government who I’m sure the ANC had difficulty in dealing with. But it was part of the process. It was the price you paid for a peaceful transition. The same applies to cricket.”

The return of Test cricket would give the appearance, at least, that Zimbabwe is almost back to normal. Alistair Campbell, a former captain and now chairman of selectors, said: “I’d like to see England and Australia touring here again. I’d like to sip chardonnay on the opening day of a Test at Harare Sports Club.”

At the sports club’s Maiden or Red Lion pubs, a summer’s day on the playing fields of England can seem eerily close at hand. Whereas South Africa, that big and brash power of the continent, often reminds me of America, it’s Zimbabwe, the quieter, ironic and perhaps cripplingly introspective cousin, that makes me think of Britain.

I wonder if this is why, like many of my compatriots, I fall head over heels for this beautiful country, both strange and familiar, satisfying a lust for African adventure but leavened by a comforting, nostalgic scent of home. And I worry how healthy that is.

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The Commonwealth and Africa

Business Day

by Kaye Whiteman

29 July 2010


At the risk of readers muttering ‘there he goes again”, I find myself making a case for another look at the Commonwealth and its works, even though I wrote extensively last November on the Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM). If I return to the topic it is because the Commonwealth Secretary-General Kamalesh Sharma has been talking on ‘the Commonwealth and Africa’ at the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI) here in London. At the same time there is a evidence of unhappiness in some Commonwealth circles over the situations in both the Gambia and Rwanda.

Sharma has now been in office for over two years, and one has become accustomed to his nicely-shaped speeches, enhanced by his eloquent oratory. This one was no exception, examining the strength of the Commonwealth connection with Africa. One-third of the Commonwealth’s members are in Africa, he noted, and one-third of the members of the African Union are from the Commonwealth. After Nehru’s commitment of India to the organisation in 1949, it had become “the handmaiden” of the decolonisation process. Sharma also recalled Kwame Nkrumah’s role in 1965 in the putting of the “democratic” running of the Commonwealth into the Secretariat. In the Rhodesia/Zimbabwe crisis and in the struggle against apartheid in the next three decades, the Commonwealth was “hard at work doing the heavy lifting” The 1991 Harare Declaration marked the renewal of democratic values, not least in Africa, especially once the Commonwealth Ministerial Action Group (CMAG) had been set up in 1995.

After looking at the case histories of Nigeria and Sierra Leone, the Secretary-General addressed the Zimbabwe problem, and the “irony that the country that gave us the Harare principles was found wanting”. Sad though Zimbabwe’s suspension and voluntary departure at Abuja in 2003 was, it was “a vindication of values,” and, by embracing those values, Zimbabwe will one day return to the Commonwealth, a hope officially enshrined in the communiqué of the Port of Spain CHOGM last November. He gave a more detailed presentation of Commonwealth involvement in different aspects of governance, especially in elections (since 1990 the Commonwealth had observed 52 African polls), as well as in the new Commonwealth electoral commissioners’ network to exchange information and experiences. A critical test for the Commonwealth will be observing the elections next month in its newest member, Rwanda, with a team headed by former OAU Secretary-General Salim Ahmed Salim. Sharma, has a tendency to look at the glass half full, eschewing what he calls negative headlines.

Although he also spoke of the organisation’s not inconsiderable development role (“making a little go a long way”), it was the political message, dressed in appropriate quotes from Mandela (“making the world safe for diversity”) and Nehru (“a touch of healing”) it was the political substance that was at the core.

Different perspectives came later the same day from the Annual General Meeting of the Commonwealth Association (former staff members of the Secretariat). While the presence of Zimbabwe’s Education Minister in the present Mugabe/Tsvangirai coalition government, Senator David Coltart, making a strong appeal for international support, was in line with the present higher profile of absent Zimbabwe, other issues were also raised. The CA had invited Richard Dowden, Director of the Royal African Society to speak to their Meeting, and he lobbed some critical thoughts into the benign consensus that tends to radiate from Commonwealth occasions.

Although part of his talk recalled the glory days of the Commonwealth in the 1980s, Dowden asked questions about present orientations, including worrying whether there was any single issue that could unite the Commonwealth in line with its core values. Unless there was a greater willingness to take on causes “you could be in trouble: those who would abolish it, will.” He expressed doubts about having another Eminent Persons’ Group – “the pressure should be upwards, not searching downwards.” More specifically he wondered about the present silence over Rwanda, when even the UN has called for an inquiry into recent troubles. Lastly, I have to record his frank question on the Gambia: “Why is the Gambia still in the Commonwealth? Its appalling government should have been booted out long ago.”

As a postscript, Gambian protesters had earlier been demonstrating outside the Secretariat, as well as the Nigerian High Commission and the Senegal Embassy, because July 22 (ironically called ‘Freedom Day’) was the sixteenth anniversary of the coup of Yaya Jammeh, whose last election received qualified approval from Commonwealth observers. The protesters highlighted human rights abuses, especially the murder and disappearance of journalists, but the Commonwealth, having taken the Gambia off the CMAG list in 2000, now says that any problems are dealt with under the discreet umbrella of ‘good offices’. The only problem is, we never know the results. No doubt it might be worse if there were no good offices at all, but one thing is sure, the protests are going to increase in the run-up to next year’s presidential elections.

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