Howard visits Zimbabwe, chases vote

New Zimbabwe.com

by Nkanyiso Moyo

23 June 2010

FORMER Australian Prime Minister John Howard and the chairman of Cricket Australia, Jack Clarke, arrived in Harare on Wednesday for meetings with Zimbabwe Cricket (ZC) officials.

The visit by Howard and Clarke follows a recent charm offensive to New Zealand and Australia by Sports Minister David Coltart to end the isolation of Zimbabwe cricket.

ZC chairman Peter Chingoka, managing director, Ozias Bvute and legal and constitutional board committee member Wilson Manase met with the two men.

Zimbabwe Cricket said the meeting discussed a number of issues including the International Cricket Council (ICC), the future of cricket in Zimbabwe and Howard’s candidature for the post of Vice President of the ICC.

Both Howard and Bvute later described the meeting as friendly, constructive and frank.

Bvute said: “I am confident that each party leaves this meeting with a better understanding of the other.”

Asked what his hopes were for the future of cricket in Zimbabwe, Howard said: “My personal wish is to see Zimbabwe fully re-integrated into the world cricket family and see the sport continue to grow in all parts of the world, including Zimbabwe.”

Following the meeting, Howard and Clarke were taken on a tour of the Harare Sports Club at their request.

“I have heard great things about how fantastic this ground is and I would not have wanted to leave before I got the chance to see it for myself,” said Howard.

It was supposed to be a formality that the former Australian Prime Minister would be approved by at least seven of the ICC’s 10 Test-playing nations to take on a two-year term as vice-president, becoming president of the game’s world governing body in 2012.

The ICC had asked Australia and New Zealand to put forward a joint nomination in February, as it was the turn of those two cricket boards under the ICC’s rotational policy.

However Howard’s attacks on Zimbabwe during his Prime Ministerial days and his criticism of Sri Lankan spinner Muttiah Muralidaran’s controversial bowling action have led to some nations including Zimbabwe’s neighbouring country South Africa questioning Howard’s appointment.

A lack of support from the influential Indian board could lead to at least six nations voting against Howard, including Sri Lanka at next week’s ICC annual conference.

Howard’s problems in winning the ICC vote come after discontent in New Zealand earlier this year when Howard was eventually chosen ahead of the Kiwi candidate Sir John Anderson, a former NZ Cricket chairman.
The ICC meeting, usually held in London, has been shifted to Singapore.

Zimbabwe Cricket president Peter Chingoka is banned from travelling to Australia, the United Kingdom and the European Union over his links with the Zimbabwe government.

Next year Australia is set to host a Zimbabwean team for the first time since 2003, following a meeting between Cricket Australia and Coltart.

In keeping with Zimbabwe’s plans for gradual re-engagement with the cricket community, any series will be played between “A” teams from the two countries.

However, this still represents a major step for the African nation after years of sanctions and international condemnation.

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No chance to prepare for the future

IRIN

23 June 2010

HARARE – Chenai Moyo, 18, is confident she would have passed the examinations at her school in Harare, Zimbabwe’s capital, but for two years in a row there was no money; now she has to fend for the family and depends on an older man for support.

“I couldn’t register for examinations last year [2009] because my father had just passed away, and the little money that was there went towards his burial. My mother is not employed and now that she is ill the situation is worse for me and my brothers,” Moyo told IRIN. Her mother tested positive for HIV in 2009.

Moyo was a brilliant student but said she would probably never sit her O-Level examinations, a school-leaving certificate. “My mother talked me into marrying this man, who is an elder in our church. He has promised to look after my ill mother and my two brothers, but I have given up hope of ever going to school again,” she said.

She is not alone: recent education ministry statistics showed that some 100,000 learners (33 percent of those eligible to write O-level exams) and around 10,700 learners (29 percent of those eligible for A-level exams) had failed to register.

“This year … there are a number of students out there who have failed [to register] because of poverty,” education minister David Coltart said in a statement.

Zimbabwe’s ailing education system, once a model for sub-Saharan Africa, has buckled and all but collapsed under the economic and political crises of the past decade, when widespread food shortages, hyperinflation, cholera outbreaks, and an almost year-long strike by teachers in 2008 led to a dramatic decline in the standard of learning.

It is not uncommon for 10 pupils to share a textbook, and although the government drastically slashed school fees in February 2009, deepening poverty put even the reduced cost of attending government schools in some areas beyond the reach of thousands of children.

The government extended the initial exam registration deadline of 28 May by two weeks, but most people were sceptical that parents and students who had previously been unable to pay the fees – US$10 per O-level subject and US$20 per A-level subject – would be able to raise the money in time.

“The extension means nothing at all – the period is too short, and one wonders why the government is in such a hurry to close the door on students,” the president of the Progressive Teachers Union of Zimbabwe (PTUZ), Raymond Majongwe, told IRIN.

“Besides, late entrants will be fined US$5 per subject and we don’t know where the government expects the poor parents that have failed to raise the examination fees to get the extra amount.”

Majongwe said he thought the ministry’s figure for the number of students who had failed to register for examinations was an “understatement” of the gravity of the situation.

“According to our own independent surveys, close to 200,000 O- and A-level students have been denied the chance to prepare for their future. There are thousands who have resigned themselves to fate, as they have failed to write in the past and are not part of the current statistics since they are not attending school,” he pointed out.

A headmaster at a secondary school in Seke rural district, about 40km south of the capital, said only 30 students at his school would write their O-level examinations this year.

“I was supposed to have 125 students sitting for their O-level examinations but only a handful managed to register,” he noted. “While the examinations fees might not seem too high, it should be remembered that the majority of households in rural areas still have large families to look after, and there is a significant number of child-headed families.”

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Former Australian PM John Howard in Zimbabwe to seek support for ICC bid

The Courier Mail

By Ben Douries

23 June 2010

FORMER Australian Prime Minister John Howard is in Zimbabwe to try to shore up support for his nomination as the future boss of the International Cricket Council.

Howard is in Harare today with Cricket Australia chairman Jack Clarke, meeting key figures from Zimbabwe Cricket.

It comes ahead of a key vote at a weekend meeting of the ICC where Howard’s ascension to vice president (and future president) is due to be finalised.

Zimbabwe, apparently angry at Mr Howard’s stand against the Robert Mugabe regime during his prime ministership, had threatened to block Howard’s nomination.

Sri Lanka and South Africa also made it known they did not want Mr Howard in the job.

However last week Zimbabwe’s Sport Minister Senator David Coltart met Cricket Australia officials in Melbourne – and denied Zimbabwe was anti-Howard.

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Has ZC struck a deal with ICC? – Pakistan set to vote with India on Howard issue

The Telegraph Calcutta

22 June 2010

By Lokendra Pratap Sahi

Calcutta: The pro-John Howard lobby in the International Cricket Council (ICC) is convinced that Zimbabwe will break ranks and end its opposition to the former Australia Prime Minister’s nomination as the next vice-president of the world body.

Sharad Pawar’s successor in the No.2 position will also succeed him as the ICC president, in 2012.

Pawar’s elevation is just days away.

According to The Telegraph’s sources, Howard’s backers are confident that Zimbabwe Cricket (ZC) chairman Peter Chingoka has been “won over” by outgoing ICC president David Morgan. This also follows a meeting between Zimbabwe Sports Minister David Coltart and Cricket Australia.

“Chingoka has been assured of Zimbabwe’s return to Test cricket, possibly in May next year, with a home series against Bangladesh… In return, ZC is to back off from opposing Howard,” is how one source put it.

Zimbabwe’s last Test (against India, incidentally) was in September 2005, the series which saw the infamous spat between Sourav Ganguly and Greg Chappell.

Nobody from ZC was available for a comment, till late on Monday, but the head of one of the boards against Howard’s nomination said it was “unlikely” that Chingoka would go along with a minority group.

“Look, ZC can’t disregard the sentiments of India, South Africa, the West Indies, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh… In fact, there’s reason to believe that Pakistan, too, will sit on the same side as India, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh,” the gentleman maintained.

Apparently, Pakistan Cricket Board chairman Ijaz Butt is “opposed” to a politician, who hasn’t held any office in his own board, “hijacking” cricket’s No.1 position.

Pawar’s case is, of course, very different as he’s been associated with the Board of Control for Cricket in India for a decade.

Butt, one learns, will go along with the “consensus” reached (within Asia) before the ICC’s annual conference, in Singapore, from June 27-July 1.

The region’s Big Four are expected to meet before the annual conference gets underway.

Butt, by the way, is the outgoing head of the Asian Cricket Council and it’s Bangladesh’s turn next to have their man at the top.

Howard is Australia-New Zealand’s nominee and, had things gone according to schedule, the ICC’s Executive Board would have approved his nomination in April itself.

Nobody went on record, but till the Zimbabwe ‘development’, Howard wasn’t exactly assured even of England’s support.

England isn’t a big player, though. Indeed, to make it, Howard has to have India’s endorsement.

Major decisions require the approval of seven of the 10 Test-playing nations, all of whom have seats on the Executive Board.

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Zim’s cricket charm offensive

Southern Times

21 June 2010

Harare – Zimbabwe sports minister David Coltart has been in Australia meeting government representatives with the hope of resuming cricket ties between the two countries.

This follows a meeting with Cricket Australia (CA) officials earlier in the week, including chairman Jack Clarke and chief executive James Sutherland, where Coltart argued Zimbabwe’s case for the resumption of cricket ties.

‘Senator Coltart briefed the chairman and chief executive on his view that cricket is starting to be restored in Zimbabwe,’ a CA spokesman said.

‘His view is that it would be helpful if world cricket was able to engage with Zimbabwe cricket to help with the further restoration of the game in that country.’

Coltart requested that Australia resume cricket contact with Zimbabwe at under-19 and Australia A level, a proposal that CA will consider.
However, a sticky issue during Coltart’s trip was the ICC candidacy of former Australian prime minister John Howard which is being opposed by Zimbabwe Cricket.

‘In terms of Zimbabwe’s laws I do not have the power to give direction to Zimbabwe cricket. So I’m simply playing a role of mediator and facilitator, because Peter Chingoka and Ozias Bvute can’t at the present time travel to Australia.

‘I will meet the Zimbabwe cricket board when I get back next week and convey to them what’s been discussed, and I hope that sense will prevail,’ Coltart said

Coltart travelled to New Zealand prior to Australia and the Black Cats have already said they would work towards touring Zimbabwe next year. New Zealand called-off a scheduled tour of the country this year, citing ‘security concerns’.

However, Zimbabwe recently hosted without incident a tri-nations One Day International series involving India and Sri Lanka where the hosts made it to the finals with some encouraging performances.

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Cricket sets its sights on glory

Newstime.co.za

Sunday, June 20, 2010

By Nicholas Ndebele


ZIMBABWE Cricket (ZC) is targeting Bangladesh, West Indies and New Zealand as the first batch of countries to play when they eventually return to Test cricket next year.

ZC managing director Ozias Bvute has outlined an ambitious programme, driven by sports minister David Coltart’s drive to revive cricket ties with all nations, as the only way Zimbabwe can bounce back into Test cricket.

“It would be premature for us to jump straight into a normal playing schedule like all the other nations. Instead, we are working on a new calendar which will hopefully see us play Bangladesh, West Indies and then New Zealand over the next two years.

“We are yet to approach any of these boards with our request, though we would like Bangladesh to play in a Test match here in Zimbabwe, soon after the 2011 International Cricket Council (ICC) World Cup ends in April next year.

“The gradual re-entry is intentional, to allow our cricketers to build confidence and gain momentum. Supreme to all of this is the integrity of the results such that they are reflective of competitive cricket matches,” he said.

Zimbabwe has just played host to India and Sri Lanka in a triangular and T20 series.

“We will engage the rest of the cricketing world with the objective of playing once-off fixtures in Zimbabwe over a period,” Bvute said.

“We recognise that, in the short term, it may not be commercially viable for the other nations to have Zimbabwe touring, but we will engage them with the prospect of allowing out national team to play their A sides in their countries.

“This will allow our team to familiarise themselves with other playing conditions and ultimately gain more experience.”

Bvute stressed the need for the team to be consistent.

“The greatest hurdle we must overcome is for our team to be consistent. A lot more work needs to be done to ensure that the objective of playing consistent and competitive cricket is achieved.

“I am confident that the technical team we have around our boys, in both the franchise and national team structures, set us in the right direction.”

The domestic structures have also been revamped with the birth of the South African-style franchise system.

“It is hoped that our domestic cricket structure will serve as a valuable feeder system to our national team and, to this end, we have given a directive that our franchises engage coaches of a very high international standards .

“We have also made it mandatory that each team has a set number of foreign players,” Bvute said.

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Critical teacher shortage hits Matabeleland North

The Zimbabwean

Written by Leonard Ncube


Sunday,   20 June 2010


Province needs 1400 teachers


BULAWAYO – The Ministry of Education, Sports and Culture is battling to fill vacancies for teachers particularly for critical subjects such as science and mathematics with Matabeleland north alone in urgent need of 1 400 teachers.


The Education minister David Coltart has for the past year been in a serious drive to resuscitate the education sector that had been eroded by the economic and political meltdown of the past decade.


Speaking at the Plan International Learn Without Fear (LWF) campaign media luncheon at a local Bulawayo Hotel recently, the Provincial Education Director for Matabeleland North Province Boithatelo Mnguni, said it was important to capacitate rural schools so as to lure more teachers.


She said teachers shunned rural schools because of lack of facilities such as housing and transport as teachers had to walk distances of more than 20 km to reach the nearest main roads. She said Binga was the most affected.


“Some of the schools have no transport linking them to other parts and naturally teachers tend to shun them. Most of our rural schools are supported by temporary teachers in the form of Ordinary and Advanced level graduates. The biggest challenge now is that they are also finding it hard to continue in the education sector especially when there are no attractive packages.”


“It’s now part of history that these rural schools were manned by temporary teachers. However, our curriculum is getting narrower as we are failing to attract practical subjects’ teachers”, she said.


The provincial education boss said her ministry wants all form two pupils to do practical subjects but this was becoming increasingly difficult due to the shortage of teachers.


Hordes of teachers continued to leave the education sector to neighbouring countries such as Botswana, Namibia and South Africa where they were offered better salaries.

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The man pushing for change in Zimbabwe

The Australian

June 19, 2010

By Malcolm Conn

David Coltart is the acceptable face of Zimbabwe cricket.

A human rights lawyer and now Education, Sport, Arts and Culture Minister in Zimbabwe’s fragile inclusive government, Coltart shares a cabinet room with the man who once apparently ordered his assassination, brutal dictator Robert Mugabe.

Attempting to rebuild a shattered country many feared would become another Somalia, the least bloody choice for the opposition Movement for Democratic Change in 2008 was to try to work with those who shattered it, and Coltart is using cricket as a vehicle for reconciliation.

He was in New Zealand and Australia this past week thawing relations with both governments and pleading with cricket officials to resume tours. So well was Coltart accepted, tours involving Australia A are expected to begin within a year.

“The decision the combined MDC made was to avoid the loss of hundreds of thousands of lives we would reach this agreement, brokered by the region, which involved us swallowing hard and entering into an agreement with a political party which had been responsible for hundreds of activists’ deaths and gross acts of corruption.

“I’ve had to approach my job as minister in the same way because I firmly believe this is the only viable non-violent option open to us as a country.

“The price is that people like Robert Mugabe are still in office, and the same applies to cricket, but one cannot live in the past. One has to move on.”

Cricket is often regarded as a microcosm of its country and this is no different in Zimbabwe, where the internationally disgraced hierarchy of Zimbabwe Cricket destroyed the game at all levels simply to stay in power.

Like the elite enjoying Mugabe’s patronage, they wanted to keep their snouts in the trough as television broadcasters and the International Cricket Council continued to pour millions into the pathetic rump that became Zimbabwe cricket.

“Zimbabwe cricket has been through a terrible 10 years and almost died but I think we are seeing its resurgence,” Coltart said.

“There are still obviously many problems within cricket and one has to see this as a process of transformation which is going to take some years, not just in terms of performances on the field but the way we run our cricket.”

So close is ZC president Peter Chingoka considered to be to the Mugabe regime, he is one of the few dozen Zimbabweans banned from visiting the EU, UK and Australia, forcing the ICC to move this month’s annual meeting from London to Singapore.

“Just as Robert Mugabe is a reality . . . likewise Peter Chingoka is president of Zimbabwe Cricket and without acting unconstitutionally and unlawfully myself I cannot lawfully remove him from that office,” Coltart said.

Former players and administrators have returned to the game, improving Zimbabwe’s performance to the point where in a seven-match triangular one-day series it hosted this month, Zimbabwe beat a weakened India twice and Sri Lanka once, making the final in front of India.

Coltart hopes Zimbabwe can resume playing Test cricket against weaker nations such as Bangladesh as soon as next year.

Chingoka and ZC chief executive Ozias Bvute, are believed by some to be behind an insidious behind-the-scenes campaign against Australasia’s nomination of John Howard as a future ICC president because of his strident opposition to the Mugabe regime.

What should have been a rubber stamp after Australia and New Zealand eventually settled their differences to nominate the former Australian prime minister has now become an embarrassing vote at the ICC’s annual meeting, which begins tomorrow week.

Not surprisingly, Chingoka and Bvute have hardly been forthcoming with Coltart, who has no direct role with ZC, but his influence is significant and he is determined to re-engage with Australia and New Zealand.

“I have spoken to Zimbabwe Cricket about this (Howard). They say they have not reached a decision,” Coltart said.

“I’ve reached a consensus with them. I as minister and they as Zimbabwe Cricket recognise it’s important that we normalise our relations with all cricket associations.

“Unless we do, we’re not going to achieve our aim of improving Zimbabwe cricket.

“One can hardly normalise relations with New Zealand Cricket and Cricket Australia if our first act is going to be to stand in the way of their preferred choice. Zimbabwe Cricket understand that.”

The ICC annual meeting this month will highlight just how well ZC does understand this.

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When All is Not Black and White: Lessons from Zimbabwe

Croz Walsh’s Blog

19 June 2010


I was at Auckland airport, just having returned from Fiji last week (of that more later), when I picked up a discarded copy of The Dominion Post* opened at “Mugabe’s Uneasy Ally Pleads for Kiwi Cricket Tour.” Intrigued — and thinking there could be a lesson here for New Zealand and Fiji — I read on.
David Coltart is the only White member of Zimbabwe’s Cabinet, a member of a breakaway faction of Morgan Tsvangirai’s MDC party that shares power in a shakily-brokered truce with Mugabe’s Zanu PF party; and he is the country’s leading human rights lawyer. He’s been threatened with imprisonment, survived an assassination attempt, and a number of his supporters and clients have “disappeared.”

How is it possible, I wondered, that this man is in a cabinet headed by one of the world’s worst human rights abusers? A man responsible for the deaths of tens of thousands, who ruthlessly crushed all opposition, whose policies impoverished his people and brought the country’s economy to its knees?

“It’s been very difficult for us in the human rights community,” he said, “but in 2008 many of us came to the position that, unless we reached this agreement, Zimbabwe would be taken down to the level of Somalia or Liberia … we were forced to choose between justice and the future.”

“The agreement provided a non-violent evolutionary means of achieving a transition to democracy. Inevitably that meant that some of our goals of holding people to account for terrible crimes would not be achieved [but] by reaching this agreement, we would save lives, potentially hundreds of thousands of lives. And that was a price worth paying.”

So far he thinks his decision was the right one. “There are still huge problems.  There is still rampant corruption … ongoing human rights abuses … but there are positive signs … fewer reports of torture … disappearances … a big reduction in the number of political prosecutions.”

“There have also been improvements …Government-controlled TV and radio stations have opened up slightly … an independent daily newspaper began publishing last week … inflation has been brought under control … the cholera epidemic has ended, health clinics have reopened … hospitals stabilised … and 7,000 schools have reopened.”

“There is no guarantee the transitional arrangements will result in a new constitution or free and fair elections, but progress is being made.”

Zimbabwe is cricket-mad. Coltart wants New Zealand to send a team because he thinks sport is a way of uniting and stabilising a country;  a way to rebuild national as opposed to partisan pride.  Most importantly, he thinks a tour would strengthen the hand of the moderates within Mugabe’s Zanu PF and MDC parties.

His message to the New Zealand Government and people? “If you don’t support the moderates within Zanu PF and the MDC, you play into the hand of the hardliners who were prepared to destroy Zimbabwe in 2008 and are still prepared to take it back to that.”

I’m sure I don’t need to spell out the relevance of David Coltart’s experience and advice to people of goodwill in New Zealand and Fiji.

Thank you, Dompost columnist Nick Venter, for this article. You have given us a better insight into Zimbabwe than Dompost readers have ever had on Fiji. Dominion Post 15 June 2010.

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We are not anti-Howard for ICC: Zimbabwe Cricket

Zimbabwe Guardian

By Nancy Pasipanodya

19 June 2010

ZIMBABWE cricket bosses have denied rumours that they are agitating to stymie former Australian Prime Minister John Howard's nomination as a future ICC president. 

Zimbabwe Cricket says it has not reached a decision on Australasia's elevation of Mr Howard to the game's most senior administrative post despite international media reports saying they opposed the nomination.

Australia and New Zealand nominated him in March to become vice-president and now hope that he will succeed India’s Sharad Pawar, who is about to begin a two-year term.

The ICC’s annual meeting begins today week in Singapore. The venue was shifted to the South East Asian country as ZC President Peter Chingoka is not allowed to travel to Britain.

Mr Howard is a controversial figure who is despised by politicians in Zimbabwe for imposing illegal and crippling sanctions against Zimbabwe. However, cricket bosses in Zimbabwe say their decision to block or aid Howard’s elevation will be purely on sporting, not political, grounds.

Minister of Education and Sport, David Coltart, who visited Australia and New Zealand last week said he had spoken to the cricket bosses, Peter Chingoka (ZC President) and Ozias Bvute (General Manager) about the nomination.

“I have spoken to Zimbabwe Cricket about this (Howard nomination). They say they have not reached a decision,” minister Coltart said.

“I’ve reached a consensus with them. I as minister and they as Zimbabwe Cricket recognise it’s important that we normalise our relations with all cricket associations.

“Unless we do, we’re not going to achieve our aim of improving Zimbabwe cricket.

“One can hardly normalise relations with New Zealand Cricket and Cricket Australia if our first act is going to be to stand in the way of their preferred choice. Zimbabwe Cricket understand that.”

Zimbabwe hopes to be back in Test cricket by next May after voluntarily dropping out four years ago.

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