Who is my enemy?

Kubatana Blog

20 April 2010

By Mgcini Nyoni

Should we take the invitation of the North Koreans to camp in Zimbabwe as an insult? Should we forget that the military ’strategies’ of the Koreans is what wiped out entire villages.

Who is my enemy here? Is it the Koreans who trained sadistic ’soldiers in the art of killing and maiming. Or is it perhaps the Zimbabwe ‘government’ – read Zanu PF or better still read Robert Mugabe, who unleashed the violence to begin with.

What will happen if a Korean ever decides to ‘invest’ in Matabeleland? Will he suffer for the sins of his fathers? Or should a son suffer for the sins of his father. Who is my enemy here, the Koreans or Mugabe?

Is Roy Bennett an enemy of the black Zimbabwean? Is he answerable for the sins of his father who destroyed schools that were being  built for black children? Should David Coltart apologise for being in Smith’s police force?

It might seem as if I am asking silly questions, but these same questions and more will always be a stumbling block to a united Zimbabwe. If such a thing will ever exist. We should ask the difficult questions and get answers; satisfactory answers.

Are the Shona and the Ndebele enemies? Is an Ndebele guy who supports Dynamos a sellout? Is an Ndebele guy who marries a Shona woman a sellout? Should we look the other way and spit on the ground if someone addresses us in Shona in Matabeleland? Is there a Shona project to colonise Matabeleland and destroy the very core of Ndebele customs, languages and identity?

Who is my enemy? Is it the Shona policeman deployed in Tsholotsho or was he just deployed there? Is he part of the Shona supremacy movement, an agent, thoroughly briefed on how to go about creating the Republic of Mashonaland? Is the British journalist or human rights campaigner genuine or just here to make sure the British maintain their economic stronghold on Zimbabwe?

Is it as simple as Mugabe being a dictator and the whole charade being about unseating him? But he has killed less people now than he killed in Matabeleland in the eighties? Or is Ndebele blood a lighter shade of red than Shona blood?

I have done enough asking for today and I demand answers?

Who is my enemy?

This entry was posted on April 20th, 2010 at 7:12 am by Mgcini Nyoni

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“Zimbabwe is only now starting to emerge from a nightmare…” says Senator Coltart

Liberal International

19 April 2010

On 19 April, Zimbabwe marked 30 years of rule by Robert Mugabe, who has served as both Prime Minister and the first President of the country. Last year, Robert Mugabe entered into a power sharing agreement with the Movement for Democratic Change-Tsvangirai (MDC-T led by Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai) and Movement for Democratic Change(MDC led by Deputy Prime Minister Arthur Mutumbara).

Senator David Coltart, Minister for Education, Culture and Sport from MDC, and theme rapporteur for the 56th Congress of Liberal International, had this to say of the occasion: “One cannot analyse Mugabe’s 30 years’ of rule in isolation. It needs to be put in the context of 50 years of undemocratic rule: almost 20 years under the Rhodesian Front party whose legacy was 30 years of Zanu PF misrule. Southern Rhodesia lost its way in the early 1960s; the undemocratic and racist rule of the Rhodesian Front radicalised black nationalist politics. Zanu PF merely adapted and perpetuated authoritarian laws and policies first devised by the Rhodesian Front. Zimbabwe is only now emerging from a nightmare which was last five decades.’

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A letter to my sister Petina Gappah

Mukomana-speaking.blogspot.com

By Tich

19 April 2010


Dear Petina,
The month of April is one that is such a blessing to the working folk. The four and three day official working weeks seem to be in a race to out-do each other. If you are resident in Zim your reduced working hours have the added bonus of Independence Day to add to them.
I fought so hard to avoid the temptation to actually look up a definition of the word; lest what I believe it to be is not what it ought to be. I barely fought down that compelling urge.
Just as I won that battle I came upon Petina Gappah’s column in the Sunday Times and thought; Damn I really must look up that definition after all.
Petina lists as the successes of independent Zimbabwe “the end of settler rule, the legal emancipation of women, enhanced standards of education and national cohesion”.
I beg to differ, Petina, as have numerous others in response to your column in The Gaurdian. While I will not go so far as to label you, an erstwhile author, a Zanu PF apologist I beg to put forward my thoughts on her take on the successes of Independence.
Ruling a country is about excercising power and the only real power that we can speak of is economic. Can we truly say that the people of Zimbabwe are economically emancipated. Did we not swap a ruling looting elite of caucasian descent for one led by the off-spring of Malawian immigrants? If settler rule indeed came to an end in 1980 why do we today as we speak have a debate raging over indiginisation without a single dissenting voice? Only Douglas Munatsi CEO of Abc Bank has come out to say that we do not necessarily need to indiginise but rather rethink allocation of government banking mandates. Even this is only for just one sector of what was once a vast economy.
I imagine it is because while the settler’s handed over political power they retained economic means. Their descendents who now claim to be as African as any black man still hold these means in their hands. How many poor white people do you see in Zimbabwe? Surely in a place where a dominant group is no longer such the random distribution of wealth and poverty will mean that any and all peoples populate both sides of the fabled tracks. Why is this not so in Zimbabwe? Why have young, vibrant, enterprising and bold Zimbabweans left Zimbabwe?

While I am not too conversant with changes in legislation that have resulted in the legal emancipation of women I suggest the fact that such emancipation is so qualified points to the truth that such emancipation means little else other than a statute in a big book somewhere. How emancipated are these women when the Border Gezi graduates raped and maimed countless women in the run-up to the last elections and if present reports are credible still do so with impunity. Why is the founder of the Girl Child Network sought out by the dreaded C.I.O? I put it foward it means little that the legal statutes and such are in place when the justice system that should uphold them is such a mockery and as a result cannot enforce these statutes. What comfort is legislation to a dispossessed widow if such statute cannot restore possession of that which is legally hers? The practice of offering nubile virgin girls as appeasement for ngozi is rife and oft reported in the NATIONAL PRAVDA. It continues unabated. What emancipation for women?

Enhanced standards of education – Petina, shuwa here? Really. One acronym. ZIMSEC. Need I say more? Where are the teachers? Working as security guards and restaurant waitrons in South Africa or as care assistants in England? Figures in the billions have been bandied about as being necessary to the rehabilitation of the education system by David Coltart. Is he insane? Petina do you know something that the rest of us do not? How many public schools has the government built since 1980?

National cohesion? When the mere fact that my politics does not agree with yours is enough reason for you to petrol bomb my car – an atrocity for which you are given immunity from prosecution (R.I.P Tichaona Chiminya) step forward C.I.O Operative Kitsiyatota. How cohesive is our nation. When a vast and prolific national resource is plundered for and to the benefit of a few how cohesive is our nation (Chiadzwa). How are we driving towards a common goal. When mass graves are filled in a time of peace and without a hint of civil war how do we have national cohesion. Going back some moons ago – I doubt the people of Matebeleland have much to say on that. Gukurahundi. A known fact. Now we have the Korean soccer team coming over to say and a government minister fully aware of the history and a veiled admission of guilt by Baba vaChatunga (moment of madness he called…a long moment if ever) asks people to be calm.
How cohesive are we?

There are successes in there somewhere I am certain Petina. I will be the first to admit that I am bitter. The rampant looting and plunder, outbreak of diseases, record obliterating inflation, hunger, poverty, unemployment, lack of remorse, vulgar pontificating, disregard for others, blatant self preservation and aggrandisement….I could go on – have made me rather bitter and I will be hard-pressed to see the successes of our 30 years of independence. Truly I agree with you that this does not mean I would rather the injustices of the past regime were thus perpetuated.

However I suggest that you dig a little deeper for these successes and not gloss over all that is not right. Of course there is always the danger of falling into the category of those that continue to whine over how Zimbabwe is now a basket case. But that is what it is.
Dig deeper Petina – I know you can.

All the best,

Tich

p.s please keep on writing. I enjoy your work immensely.

Posted by Tich

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Teachers’ welfare under review

Sunday Mail

18 April 2010

Sunday Mail Reporter

CABINET is considering a number of strategies to improve the welfare of teachers to stop their exodus ahead of the second school term.

The Minister of Education, Sport, Arts and Culture, Senator David Coltart, revealed that he had raised the issue in Cabinet last week to stop the further drop in education standards.
“We raised the issue in our recent Cabinet meeting and we have tabled a number of strategies to address the welfare of both the rural and urban teacher.
“The welfare of teachers is of great concern to the Government and we are lobbying Cabinet and the donor community to urgently assist the education sector, but at the moment it’s premature to say what has been the outcome from our Cabinet meeting,” said Sen Coltart.
Sen Coltart said his ministry had engaged the donor community to assist in funding teacher’s salaries.
“The ministry has so far made tremendous strides with the donor community and we have approached Australia, Scandinavian countries, China and Japan through ambassadors in the country.
“Currently, we have an education fund managed by the United Nations Children’s Fund and this is another fund we are relying on to assist the country’s education sector,” said Sen Coltart.
In the last school term, teachers downed their tools, demanding a 200 percent increment on their salaries.
Teachers’ unions are engaging the Government for a salary hike which they want before the opening of the second term, but Finance Minister Mr Tendai Biti last week said Treasury has no money for higher salaries.
Sen Coltart said there were disparities between what the rural and the urban teacher was earning, adding that private schools would be allowed to continue paying allowances to teachers.
“The education sector only made 14 percent of the national budget, but as recommended by Unesco we were supposed to be having 22 percent. “Until we have such a percentage in the budget, teachers’ incentives will have to continue, but those teachers who extort money from parents and schoolchildren will face the wrath of the law,” said Sen Coltart.
He said abolishing the incentives would result in teachers leaving the country in droves to seek the so-called greener pastures.
Progressive Teachers’ Union of Zimbabwe (PTUZ) secretary-general Mr Raymond Majongwe said there were indications on the ground that a number of their members were leaving the country. “Delays in addressing the welfare of teachers is creating another mass exodus of the country’s teaching staff. They are leaving for neighbouring countries like South Africa, Botswana and Namibia,” said Mr Majongwe.

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Zim education will regain its former glory: President Mugabe

The Herald
17 April 2010
By Sydney Kawadza and Felex Share

Government is working hard to ensure Zimbabwe’s education system regains its status as one of the best in Africa, President Mugabe has said.

Addressing schoolchildren and guests at the traditional Independence Day children’s party at the City Sports Centre in Harare, President Mugabe said although the education system had been battered over the past few years, Government was confident things would soon improve.

He paid tribute to teachers and parents who stood by Government during the past difficult decade.

“I congratulate your parents for having managed to sustain you, working hard, in some cases with tears flowing from their eyes.

“They managed to get the necessary resources to support your education. We still are going through a difficult patch but we hope things will become better. Keep up that patience, hard work and fortitude and ensure that children remain in school.

“To the teachers, it is with regret and apologies that your reward has been nothing but a mere pittance; not worthy to be called salaries at all but just allowances.

“(However), that professional drive has been pushing you not to let the children down. We feel for you, I personally do feel for you,” he said.

President Mugabe commended Education, Sport, Arts and Culture Minister David Coltart for his efforts to get sufficient resources for education.

“I happen to know that Minister Coltart is busy knocking at doors each day. He has tried his best but these knocks have yielded nothing and sometimes very little.

“I want to assure you that we are doing our best and things will improve. I cannot see them getting any worse because we are working hard that they improve.”

President Mugabe said parents and teachers should work with the Govern-ment to improve education.

“Togetherness is vital and the reward of doing so will see us prospering sooner than later.

“Quite a number of children have dropped out of school and it pains us because we had developed our system of education to a level that it was admired by many in Africa, if not the world.

“To reach such a stage where children drop out of school is a negation of the principle we set ourselves to achieve in the first instance.

“Our standards have fallen. But, of course, there is always room for improvement and the hopes that things will get better.

“Let’s keep the spirit that shows that there is always optimism on the part of parents, children and Government that we are moving ahead that there is progress not retrogression,” he said.

President Mugabe exhorted children to work hard at school to avoid wasting their parents’ and guardians’ money.

“You are our torchbearers. When parents send you to school and Government works hard to sustain your education, it is you we are looking up to, we are reposing our trust in you.

“In you we have our beliefs that our tomorrow, tomorrow and tomorrow will see a Zimbabwe which would grow better and better.

“Pay attention to your lessons even with the little resources available. Take education seriously, you are indeed our successors and we do not want our successors to be ignorant.

“We want you to be enlightened and we do hope that teachers and parents will also be guided by the students,” he said.

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Deteriorating education system and political tensions have led to severe teacher shortage

Education International www.ei-ie.org

16 April 2010


Zimbabwe Education Minister David Coltart promised delegates attending the annual conference of the Zimbabwe Teachers’ Association (ZIMTA) on 14 April that he would immediately terminate the possibility for parents to pay incentives to teachers, if the country’s teachers organisations would ask him to do so.

Coltart, who said to share ZIMTA’s concern about inadequate teachers pay levels, explained that the poor state of the Zimbabwe economy had left the country little choice to allow parents to top up teachers’ salaries.

Incentives that parents can pay to improve teachers’ salaries have become one of the most controversial issues facing the education unions of Zimbabwe. It is dividing teachers and has incapacitated access to education by the most vulnerable groups of our society, said ZIMTA President Tendai Chikowore in her opening address.

She stressed that it is not the responsibility of parents but the task of the government to ensure that teachers’ salaries, which currently are below the poverty line, be raised to fair and adequate levels.

Chikowore voiced deep concern about the shrinking national education budget. While in 1980 an average amount of US$6 was allocated per pupil, in 2009 this amount had dropped to US$0.70. As a result, the pupil-textbook ratio in urban schools has dropped to 1 textbook for every 10 pupils while in rural schools, there is only 1 textbook available for every 40 pupils.

The deterioration of the education system and the political tensions the country has been struggling with for a long time have caused an exodus of teachers.
ZIMTA estimates that in the past decade more than 20,000 teachers have left the country. In 2009, according to Chikowore, 35% of the teacher posts in primary education and 33% in secondary education were vacant.

She noted that “teachers’ morale sank to its lowest ebb since independence” and that any form of support for the reconstruction of Zimbabwe should recognize the need for support to teachers.

“Strategies are to be put in place to motivate them and help them cope with post traumatic effects of violence,” she said.

In that regard the ZIMTA President warned that “political parties should stop using schools as focal points for mobilizing their followership”.

ZIMTA, which is the largest education union in the country, has decided to work closely with the Progressive Teachers’ Union of Zimbabwe (PTUZ) to confront the many challenges the country’s school system is facing.

PTUZ’s General Secretary Raymond Majongwe, who also addressed the conference, said he expected both organisations would soon be able to unite.

EI General Secretary Fred van Leeuwen, also present at the ZIMTA conference, asked government representatives “not to underestimate the important role teachers and education unions play in democratic development and nation building”.

“Teachers are not only the public employees that should be engaged in social dialogue, they are also professional educators, the intellectual spearhead of your nation, that have valuable contributions to make to the future of Zimbabwe. Please, listen to them attentively,” he said.

ZIMTA’s 29th annual conference was held in Harare from 13-16 Apr with some 250 representatives from ZIMTA’s provincial sections in attendance.

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Iron rule of Robert Mugabe casts pall over 30 years of Zimbabwean independence

The Guardian
Friday, 16 April 2010

Three decades of bloodshed prompt revisionist view of president who went from freedom fighter to tyrant

Prince Charles saluted as the band played God Save the Queen. Thousands at the Rufaro football stadium in Salisbury, Rhodesia cheered when the union flag was lowered on one pole, and the red, green, black and gold flag of Zimbabwe raised on another. Legend has it that the first official words spoken in the new nation were: “Ladies and gentlemen, Bob Marley and the Wailers.”

The Jamaican reggae star performed a song, Zimbabwe, watched by the new prime minister, Robert Mugabe. A power cut plunged the celebrations into darkness and tear gas was used to subdue panic in the crowd. But no one, that day, wanted to read the runes.

Few could have guessed that , when the country marks 30 years of independence, it will also be forced to salute 30 years of Mugabe’s iron rule. Nor could they have imagined they would be asking how this eloquent freedom fighter, once lauded by the West and knighted by the Queen, turned into one of Africa’s most reviled tyrants.
Today there are many Zimbabweans who believe that, far from being a good man corrupted by power, Mugabe’s ruthless streak was forged long ago in the bitter liberation struggle, during which he spent 10 years in jail. Reflecting on three decades of bloodshed, economic ruin and erosion of civil liberties, they see little to celebrate in the eclipse of what was once Africa’s greatest hope.

On 18 April 1980, the renegade colony of Rhodesia gave way to the new Zimbabwe, ending a seven-year war that left 27,000 dead. Mugabe, a guerrilla fighter hated by Ian Smith’s white-minority regime, announced a policy of reconciliation and invited whites to help rebuild the country.

Among those present that day was Simba Makoni, who served in Mugabe’s first government. “What struck me was the joviality of the people,” he told the Guardian during a rare interview in Harare. “We’d just come out of a very hard war situation. There was still a lot of tension. The blacks were celebrating, the whites were obviously in mourning a little. So it was quite a mixture of feelings, but I think the dominant sentiment was one of joviality, excitement, hope and high expectations.”

Mugabe is said to have few friends. Makoni, one of his few intellectual equals, may have come as close as anyone. He toured Europe with Mugabe in the late seventies, culminating in the peace talks at Lancaster House in London.

‘Too democratic’

“I clearly regarded him as a hero, someone to look up to,” Makoni, 60, recalled. “I had a sense of what kind of a character he was. Definitely the hero, definitely the people’s leader, very committed and at that time genuine about the welfare of the people. ‘We must do the wishes of the people’.”

He added: “Some of us regarded him even in the first nine, 12 months of independence as being too democratic, allowing people too much sway and too much discussion. We were in a hurry to rectify the wrongs and he wanted debate, he wanted exhaustion of issues. Quite a different character from the Mugabe of today, regrettably.”
Makoni was not alone in his admiration for the former guerrilla leader, whose men were accused of grave atrocities during the war against Rhodesia. Britain, the former colonial power, wanted Mugabe to succeed and seemed prepared to turn a blind eye to his failings.

Dumiso Dabengwa fought for the armed liberation movement Zapu (Zimbabwe African People’s Union), led by Joshua Nkomo, which competed and sometimes clashed with Mugabe’s Zanu (Zimbabwe African National Union). At Lancaster House they agreed to join forces and take part in the 1980 elections as one party.

But Dabengwa, 70, said: “Behind Zapu’s back, they registered Zanu-PF as the party that would contest the elections. This was against the spirit of the unity agreement we had pushed for I lost some of the respect I had for Mugabe as an honest and reliable leader.”

The 1980 election, he added, was a blueprint for the crude but effective tactics that would later be used against Morgan Tsvangirai’s Movement for Democratic Change.
“From the fact they declared certain portions of the country no-go areas under their control, it was very clear they did not want democratic elections to take place. But the British thought that was still democratic so they declared the elections free and fair, contrary to what they say today when, after such incidents, they declare the elections absolutely not free and fair. You can see the contradiction. It was violence and intimidation.”

Dabengwa would later spend almost five years behind bars after being charged with treason. He is now interim chairman of Zapu. “It was not until the 90s that the British changed their mind about Mugabe, when they thought he had done a turnaround on the assurances he had given them on the land issue,” he added. “Then he became a bad boy.”

David Coltart, a white Zimbabwean who is now education minister, was studying abroad in Cape Town at the time of independence. His Focus On Zimbabwe events there were banned by South Africa’s apartheid government. When Mugabe learned of this in 1981, he sent Coltart a telegram of support encouraging him to come home.

Coltart returned to Zimbabwe in December 1982. “I was a very keen supporter of Robert Mugabe and it took quite a long time for that sentiment to evaporate,” he said. “It started with the Gukurahundi.”

Gukurahundi means “the rain that washes away the chaff before the spring rains”. It is also the name given to ethnic cleansing in the province of Matabeleland. Mugabe’s North Korean-trained Fifth Brigade crushed an armed rebellion by fighters loyal to Nkomo, leader of the minority Ndebele tribe. An estimated 20,000 people died in the massacre.

Coltart, who had just begun working as a young human rights lawyer in the province, did not want to believe it. “I can remember arguing with friends that yes, these were terrible things happening, but these must be renegade elements within the army and Robert Mugabe couldn’t possibly know what was going on. It took quite a long time for me to realise that in fact he did know what was going on.”

It was only a decade later, when he began work on a report documenting the killings, that Coltart realised that as early as August 1980 Mugabe had travelled to North Korea and sought Kim Il-sung’s help in developing a unit capable of crushing internal dissent.

Among the victims was the family of Max Mkandla, 53, who was away from home when the soldiers came. He said: “They took my brother as [an] example and beat him up. They would take people to certain bases for the whole night. That is where my father was killed. He was shot at and then finally his brother was forced to take an axe and chop off his head.”

Simba Makoni said: “I am quite sure that even as Gukurahundi was taking place, there was a lot of pain in Robert Mugabe’s heart, if I think back to conversations we had at the time. But then again, it could have been crocodile tears.”

The economy grew in the early eighties as agriculture thrived and Mugabe built clinics and schools that made Zimbabwe one of the healthiest and most literate countries in Africa. It was not to last.

Economic chaos

The downturn began in 1997, when Mugabe gave in to pressure from war veterans waging violent protests for pensions. Meanwhile civic groups and unions began organising what would become the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) – the country’s first viable opposition party. But it was partly bankrolled by white farmers, which allowed Mugabe to paint them as counter-revolutionaries and whip up militancy.

He launched a land reform programme in 2000. It was ostensibly to correct the colonialist legacy by giving white-owned farms to landless black people. But many saw it as a concerted attempt to wipe out a million MDC votes. White farmers were brutally evicted, replaced by Zanu-PF cronies or black Zimbabweanswho lacked the skills and capital to farm.

The ensuing chaos undermined the economy, which shrank to half the size it had been in 1980. The Zimbabwean dollar went into freefall. The one-time food exporter became dependent on foreign aid. Hyperinflation set world records. Schools and hospitals crumbled, cholera broke out and life expectancy dropped from 61 to 45. An estimated 3m people fled to neighbouring South Africa.

But in the 2008 election, Mugabe refused to go quietly. The MDC claims that 253 people died in political violence. Lawyers, journalists and human rights defenders still face harassment and arrest.

Makoni, now interim president of the Mavambo Kusile Dawn party, was finance minister from 2000 to 2002. Did the president ever understand the human cost of his actions? Makoni replied: “I would say yes, he knows, but he will be very selective about what he acknowledges he knows and doesn’t know. Many times it’s very convenient to suggest that I don’t know because it’s uncomfortable to live with the fact if you acknowledge it.”

Mugabe, said to wake at 4am for exercise and to enjoy cricket, is often described as charming and charismatic, with the manners and formal dress code of a Victorian Englishman. He constantly demonises Britain but apparently loves the royal family, though he was stripped of his honorary knighthood in 2008. The death in 1992 of his wife, Sally, a compassionate influence, is blamed by Makoni for a change in his character.

Makoni found him to be a family man. “I remember very clearly, the last conversation I had with him, talking about his daughter Bona – how she hadn’t done so well in school, how she was crying herself out, how she wasn’t sure what she wanted to do. So there was quite a personable aspect to him, a kind of very caring father figure, which belies all the cruelty, the harshness and the despotism.”

Whereas Nelson Mandela’s statue now stands in Parliament Square in London, Mugabe has destroyed his legacy in the eyes of the world. Unlike Mandela, who stepped down after one term, Mugabe seems intent on clinging on until his dying day. Last year he was forced to join a unity government with the MDC but remains president and, in many eyes, as powerful and menacing as ever.

Dabengwa said: “After tasting so much power, I don’t think he’s about to give it away. It’s only when the heavens call him he will surrender.”

A hardcore of support in Zanu-PF appears to be in denial that such a day will ever come.

George Mlala, political commissar for the War Veterans Association in Bulawayo province, said: “Yes, the western world considers him a dictator, a non-democratic leader. That is their opinion, they are entitled to their opinion – they have never done anything better in terms of elections. They have said Mugabe has been in power for too long. That is not correct.”

Others long for the day he will be gone, though how Zanu-PF – and the military – will respond to such a trauma is a great unknown. At 30 years, this young country has never known independence from Robert Mugabe.

But Makoni warned against blaming its plight entirely on one person. “Mugabe hasn’t done these things alone. I place more responsibility for the condition of our country on the people around Robert Mugabe than on Mugabe himself.

“If the rest of us – and I include myself in this – had put our foot down and said, ‘President, we must do land reform but not this way, we must do empowerment of the people of Zimbabwe but not this way,’ I don’t think that singlehandedly Mugabe would have done it.”

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Zimbabwe’s problems mars its Independence Celebrations

VOA
By Peta Thornycroft
Johannesburg
16 April 2010

Zimbabwe celebrates 30 years of independence this weekend but there is little hope for the future in a country only slowly recovering from economic collapse after three decades of President Robert Mugabe’s rule.

The first two years of Zimbabwe’s independence were optimistic. Good crops and peace after 15 years of civil war.

Mr. Mugabe, now 86, spearheaded a guerrilla war against white minority rule in the then Rhodesia, along with Joshua Nkomo, founder of the liberation party called Zimbabwe Africa People’s Union, or ZAPU.

In the end, the British negotiated a peace deal along with a new constitution and Mr. Mugabe’s party swept into power in 1980 after its first election since it gained independence. “We had free and fair elections and the results are what you now know,” he said.

Senator David Coltart, one of Zimbabwe’s top human rights lawyers, is now education minister in an tense coalition government. He, like many, had fears about Mr. Mugabe and ZANU-PF when they came to power. “On the 18th of April 1980 I had mixed emotions, because on the one hand I was excited by the end of the war but on the other hand many of us still had ZANU-PF’s rhetoric ringing in our ears that there would be retribution and that there would be some form of Marxist Leninist policy applied to the government. So I think that there was a fair amount of anxiety mixed in with the joy of peace,” he said.

Within two years of independence, Mr. Mugabe, then prime minister, sent in North Korean trained troops against the then opposition party, ZAPU, led by Joshua Nkomo.

Human rights lawyers, like Mr. Coltart, and the churches said their research shows about 20,000 ZAPU supporters, who were mostly from the minority Ndebele tribe, were killed and many more fled the country.

The origins of the hostility between Mr. Mugabe’s ZANU-PF from the majority Shona tribe and ZAPU surfaced in public just before the first democratic elections.

Instead of fighting the election as one political party as had been planned, Mr. Mugabe rejected the alliance with ZAPU and the two parties ran separately.

Gibson Sibanda, was a member of ZAPU and had been in detention. “It more or less became a tribal election, people were thinking on tribal lines, on ethnicity and it continued for quite some time after the 1980 elections,” he said.

Sibanda later became president of the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Union, which played a key role in formation of the Movement for Democratic Change when it was formed in late 1999.

The MDC nearly beat ZANU-PF in the 2000 elections, and Sibanda and its president, Morgan Tsvangirai, were then regularly harassed and detained.

The MDC, which narrowly won the 2008 elections is now in a unity government with Mr. Mugabe and ZANU-PF. Many believe Mr. Tsvangirai, who is prime minister in the unity government, has been cheated out of victories against Mr. Mugabe in the 2000 and 2008 elections.

About 1,000 MDC supporters have been killed, thousands injured and tens of thousands arrested since the MDC was formed, despite the fact it has support across all tribal and racial groups in Zimbabwe.

For years, Mr. Mugabe has claimed that the West supported the MDC, mostly targeting Britain. He recently re-iterated his stance on the former colonial power. “I will never, never, never, never surrender. Zimbabwe is mine. I am a Zimbabwean. Zimbabwe for Zimbabweans. Zimbabwe never for the British. Britain for the British,” he said.

But, many Zimbabweans now believe that the greatest threat to Mr. Mugabe’s wish to continue in power is the economic devastation brought by his controversial policies.

While the fragile coalition has stabilized the economy and re-opened schools and hospitals, it is too broke to rebuild collapsed public infrastructure and provide clean water. At least eight out of 10 potential workers are unemployed, and organized crime and corruption are increasing in the wake of a decade-long economic recession.

Many analysts say that Mr. Mugabe is resisting political reforms and delaying progress of the unity government to buy time so that ZANU-PF can rebuild itself before the next elections due in about two years.

While Mr. Mugabe argues that many of his policies were meant to correct colonial injustices and economically empower native Zimbabweans, it has left a former bread basket of the region surviving on food handouts.

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Teachers Write Stinging Letter To Mugabe and Tsvangirai

RadioVOP
April 16,2010

The Zimbabwe Teachers Association (ZIMTA) has written a stinging letter to Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai as Head of Government and President Robert Mugabe as Head of State telling them that they are now fed up with their low salaries, Radio VOP can exclusively reveal.

ZIMTA President Tendai Chikowore said :”We are fed up with our low salaries and we have written a stinging letter to Morgan Tsvangirai and President Mugabe telling them that time is up.

“We need US$502 as a minimum salary in order to survive. Just who do they think we are.”

She said this at the just ended meeting held in Harare where more than 300 delegates from around Zimbabwe attended.

Chikowore said however none of the leaders had responded to the stinging letter so far.
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She said the teachers would consider industrial action to cripple teaching services once again in Zimbabwe like what happened last year.
However last year some teachers went back to service after being given incentives which this year they said they would refuse to take up.

“The argument that there is no money holds no water,” Chikowore told delegates some of whom were very angry. “Our current demand is for US$502. Where is the money from Chiadzwa going.”

However Education, Sport and Culture Minister, David Coltart, told ZIMTA members that government hd no money to pay them the huge salaries as demanded.

Meanwhile teachers unions in Zimbabwe have refused to unite.

“We will not unite with anybody and anybody who wants to join us can do so,” said Chikowore.

Raymond Majongwe, President of the Progressive Teacers Union of Zimbabwe (PTUZ), had said he wanted all the teacher unions to unite.

There are three teacher unions in the country but ZIMTA and PTUZ are the largest and most vocal.

“This is the first time that we must unite foir the sake of progress,” Majongwe said while addressing delegates in an impromptu speech.

The Education International organisation from Europe which funds ZIMTA had said it would stop funding the organisation if Zimbabwe continued to have too many associations.

Coltart in his address to ZIMTA also pointed out that disunity was killing the teaching profession. “You must unite,” he said. “This is for the sake of progress.”

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Teachers divided over incentives

Chronicle
16 April 2010
By Brian Chitemba in Harare

THE Zimbabwe Teachers Association (Zimta) is deeply divided over the payment of incentives to teachers by parents with some advocating for the scrapping of the facility while others want the arrangement to stay.

The teachers, meeting at the Zimta 29th annual conference in Harare yesterday, failed to reach an agreement over the incentives, which the Minister of Education, Sport, Arts and Culture David Coltart, said were approved by the Government.

However, the majority of teachers argued that the incentives should be banned because the Government was “relaxing” to pay competitive salaries.

A teacher at Vainona High School in Harare, who refused to be named, said incentives had divided teacher unions in confronting the Government over poor salaries.
He said the Government should pay teachers a living wage of US$502 per month instead of the US$156, which he described as an insult.

“We have had a case at our school where some teachers were receiving incentives against the will of other teachers who were on strike pressing the Government to pay better salaries. However, some of the parents said they wanted to pay the incentives for the benefit of their children’s education,” said the Vainona teacher.

Another teacher said the incentives had created different classes among teachers, with some getting “a lot of money” while others were being given mealie-meal and meat, especially in the rural areas.

He said incentives were causing confusion among teachers who are pushing the Government to review their salaries.

“The employer (Government) is taking advantage of incentives not to increase our salaries. Incentives are retrogressive and must go,” said the teacher.

Teachers from the rural areas strongly felt that incentives were disadvantaging them while enriching those in former Group A schools in urban centres.

They said the incentives should be stopped immediately to allow smooth negotiation of salaries between workers and the Government.

Another teacher said: “If we get incentives as teachers, then what happens to the rest of the civil servants? Can’t you see that we are disadvantaging other workers who are lobbying for a review of salaries?”

Other teachers said the Government had clearly stated that there were no funds to increase their salaries, hence the need to keep the incentives in place as a short-term solution.

“We all know that the Government is broke and if we reject the incentives, then that means we are going to starve with our families. For now, I think, let’s just turn a blind eye and take the incentives until such a time when the Government can increase our salaries from US$156 per month,” said the teacher.

Zimta chief executive officer Mr Sifiso Ndlovu urged the association members to carry out a research in schools before making a decision that may affect them.
He said a resolution would be announced after wide consultations on whether to ban the incentives paid by parents.

On other resolutions, Zimta said political parties should be engaged in seeking a review of conditions of service and remuneration.

Zimta, which has 97 percent coverage in schools, passed a resolution that the Government should pay competitive salaries as well as improve equipment and textbook availability in schools.

“Women should be represented in positions of power at Zimta. Salaries should be reviewed in line with the Poverty Datum Line. Headmasters of schools should not teach in school,” said the teachers.

The resolutions will be forwarded to the Ministry of Education, Sport, Arts and Culture.

The conference ended yesterday and was held under the theme: “Role of Educators’ Unions in Promoting Political Cohesion: A must for the Reconstruction of Quality Education in Crisis”.

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