Zanu-PF Should Re-Strategise

The Herald
Alexander Kanengoni
7 May 2009

Harare — THE most dominant feature in Zimbabwe at the moment, straddling the political and social landscape of the country is the inclusive Government.

Different people perceive it differently, that is inevitable.

Some people see it as a monster foisted on us by outsiders that we are better off without. Others like myself see it as that largely unmarked path through thick jungle leading to a relief our beleaguered country desperately needs.

And more importantly, it is, as the English saying goes, the bird that we have in the hand. It is certainly worth much, much more than two — or even a dozen — birds still in the bush!

In my contribution to The Herald of 29 April, I mentioned a political meeting in Mt Darwin where an old man could not understand how working with Morgan Tsvangirai would be considered difficult if in 1980 we managed to work with Ian Smith.

In the heated discussion that followed, something else amusing was said.

A woman compared the inclusive Government to a wedding between Zanu-PF and the two MDC formations.

I did not agree with that comparison because a wedding is an occasion to cement a permanent arrangement; a marriage.

The inclusive Government is not a permanent arrangement.

It is a temporary agreement to achieve an immediate objective — a new constitution followed by an election.

During a keynote address to business executives at a local hotel in February, Prime Minister Tsvangirai gave the impression the inclusive Government was a permanent arrangement but President Mugabe quickly corrected the impression during his birthday interview the following week and said there would be elections.

But the question still remains, could there be things we are not being told?

Or was it, from the Prime Minister’s perspective, more like the Biblical story of Christ taking his apostles up a mountain and revealing to them the eternal beauty of the Kingdom of God that they refused to come down, preferring to stay pitched, forever soaked in that amazing splendor?

If the inclusive Government is a temporary vehicle to take us through to the next general elections, then three things are of critical importance: success and achievements of the inclusive Government, the new constitution, and outcome of the elections.

The fact that the inclusive Government has to succeed cannot be over-emphasised.

And it has covered considerable ground since its inception. The shelves of the supermarkets are full once more.

The introduction of the rand and the greenback has eased the transaction burden and people no longer have to spend countless hours at the bank.

Although the money is hard to get, at least people can buy food for their families that is readily available in the shops.

These are the bread and butter issues that eventually translate into votes at election time.
Therefore it’s not only in the interest of the people that the inclusive Government succeeds, it’s also in the interest of the different political parties that form it.

A party that is credited with the success of the inclusive Government will unquestionably reap the benefit at elections time.

That is why working against the success of the inclusive Government or merely assuming a stand-aloof position, as some Zanu-PF members seem to be doing, will ultimately work against the party.

There is need for all members of the party to come out and also claim ownership of the inclusive Government as members of the MDC are demonstrating otherwise they will walk away with all the credit for the achievements of the inclusive Government.

That is why I said in a contribution to The Herald earlier we should move beyond blaming each other over who is responsible for the mess that we are in.

Whilst some of us are expending all our energy witch-hunting and pointing fingers others are busy rectifying those mistakes of the past and taking credit for it.

The tragedy is we seem to believe bringing the MDC to admit it helped to bring upon the nation the scourge of sanctions is sufficient to win us the next general elections.

It won’t.

It’s flying around the world asking for re-opening of lines of credit as Tendai Biti is doing and sitting with teachers representatives and international donors to sort out the issue of teachers’ salaries as David Coltart is doing that will eventually translate into votes when the elections come.
It is the strategy that works.

That is taking ownership of the inclusive Government and not merely watching from the sidelines with folded arms, almost disclaiming it or wishing the temporary arrangement collapses.

To the people, the argument that it’s the opposition that helped to bring about sanctions is far-fetched and academic.

They are more interested in the removal of the effects of the sanctions on their difficult lives.
And it’s those who they see helping them to ease that burden who get the credit and their votes.
It is as simple as that.

There are also ministers in Zanu-PF who are claiming ownership of the inclusive Government and making sure it succeeds.

When Cde Herbert Murerwa goes to Chegutu farming area to find out what is happening on the ground, the farmers there feel they have not been abandoned.

When you suspect by reading the press that Cde Walter Muzembi might not be sleeping as he tries to make sure our tourist facilities are ready for the 2010 World Cup in South Africa, you see commitment and a total desire to see the inclusive Government succeed.

The same applies to Cde Saviour Kasukuwere.

The strong empowerment drive with youths across the political divide across the country that he is undertaking is a robust claim of the ownership of the inclusive Government.

To me, that is the strategy that will eventually translate into votes when the time comes.

Besides claiming ownership of the transition Government and its subsequent achievements, Zanu-PF should avoid putting itself on the defensive that in most cases is needless.

Mikhail Gorbachov told us in that meeting in Holland that his strategy to manage the disintegration of the USSR and the eastern bloc was premised on openness and frankness (glasnost and perestroika).
Openness and frankness leaves no room for doubt and ambiguity.

That is why when we appear to be resisting a land audit because it is being called for by the MDC we are placing ourselves on an unnecessary defensive.

If we have always been saying we needed an audit to clear the dirt plaguing the way land was allocated during the Land Reform Programme, why should we be suddenly jittery when MDC calls to do exactly that?

Why should we appear guilty when we are innocent? Why do we see threats where there are none?
It’s a weakness that the MDC has noticed and it is capitalising on it to the maximum in order to get the credit for the success of the inclusive Government.

It is this unnecessary defensive mode that is inhibiting some members from claiming ownership of the inclusive Government.

If there is anything that we have learned from the inclusive Government, it is that all things are important depending on how you manipulate it.

Those portfolios that were considered less important and given away to the opposition have become talking points because the opposition is manipulating them with dexterity obviously eyeing the coming elections!

There are other issues standing in the way of the success of the inclusive Government like the issue of the appointment of provincial governors, ambassadors and permanent secretaries but one hopes they will be addressed soon.

The issue of ambassadors and provincial governors was an issue that kept coming up again and again during the Sadc-brokered negotiations and a commitment was made it would be resolved once the transitional arrangement was put in place.

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Minister Coltart should get his priorities right

Financial Gazette
Letters to the Editor
Thursday, 07 May 2009

EDITOR — When David Coltart was sworn in as Education, Sport and Culture Minister, there were mixed reactions.

Some pinned their hopes on him reviving Zimbabwe’s education sector, which is in tatters; others hoped he would change the direction of national sports — including his beloved cricket.

While it is too early to judge Coltart, it is not too early to see his interest in dabbling in the politics of cricket, the discipline he said is his favourite in an interview with a local weekly — exactly a week after being sworn in on February 13.

When Coltart took oath of office with others and on February 20, he was one of the first “new brooms” to get lucky with generous coverage in the newspapers — albeit stemming from the euphoria that greeted the formation of the inclusive government.

Now that the euphoria has died down and that 100 days in the job have passed, it is time that Coltart be reminded that he has a Herculean task of sorting things in his ministry.

What has prompted me to write this letter is the verve which is quite evident in the Minister who has continued to remind people how he wants Zimbabwe’s cricket to be.

Coltart has been on radio and promised sweeping reforms at this former minority sport which has become inclusive following its expansion into the black community. There is no doubt in my mind that the Minister has biased and pre-conceived ideas in his push for changes at the Zimbabwe Cricket (ZC).

“I’m a passionate supporter of Zimbabwe cricket. I try to watch every game they play. But the demise of our team in the last five years has been a cause of great distress. I look forward to playing a role in the rehabilitation of our cricket. Nothing will give me greater satisfaction,” Coltart declared in his first interview.

There is nothing wrong with him being passionate about the sport, but there is everything wrong with him clearly showing the “urgency” that needs to be placed in reforming cricket.

His statements clearly show that he has cricket uppermost in his mind ahead of more popular sporting disciplines such as the world-appealing football. It does not take a fool to realise that the Minister believes that by getting involved personally in a sport he holds personal affection, he can restore pride and glory, easily.

Given the problems that have been reported at ZC and the resistance in the past by minority players to have black players included, I think Coltart is starting his examination of sports badly.

One would expect the honourable Minister to have, by now, held a sports indaba with administrators and spelling out his plan for our various sporting disciplines.

Football fans want to see a change to the bickering that has been deep-seated in the Zimbabwe Football Association (ZIFA) and the Premier Soccer League (PSL) even though on the surface everything appears normal.

There is no doubt that football is the biggest sport and logically one would expect big attention to a big brand like football. Cricket cannot, therefore, be at the forefront of Coltart’s priorities unless he is rushing to fulfill promises made to comrades enamored with the sport. This is my bone of contention.
Coltart should strive to gain the confidence of everyone, not a few disgruntled former white players who think by having him as Minister he can easily influence or change the direction of the sport willy-nilly without resistance.

By writing this letter, I am also expressing my disappointment with Minister Coltart because of his lack of respect for other issues relating to sports and culture that needs attention.

While he may have touched on few other issues, the said article and a recent radio interview with Hugo Ribatika, leave me with an impression that he has dirty hands in his approach to solving the problems at ZC.

I don’t think the Minister has held meetings either with the ZC board or management to clarify issues that he continues to raise in public. If he hasn’t done that, surely then, he lacks leadership skills or worse still, he has already tried and judged the people at the helm of this sport, which is now competing to become number two sport after football.

A leader of clear intentions does not wash his dirty linen in public neither does he pre-empt his motives in a newspaper article or radio programme.

Instead of focusing on cricket, Coltart, by now, would have signaled his intentions of reviving boxing where we still hold memories of the late Proud “Kilimanjaro” Chinembiri, exciting Langton “Schoolboy” Tinago, Stix Macloud, Zvenyika Alfonso and Nokuthula Tshabangu, among others.

By now, the Zimbabwe Olympic Committee (ZOC), Amateur Athletics Association of Zimbabwe (AAAZ), Tennis Association of Zimbabwe (TAZ) and many others, would have been in the picture of what the future holds.

Even the forgotten Bowling Association would love to hear what the Minister has in store for them. In the 1980s, this was a sport that brought many accolades to Zimbabwe.

The expectations do not end in sport only.

It would have been hoped that by now Coltart would have met artistes and recording companies to address problems rocking the music industry as well as meeting with the Zimbabwe Music Rights Association (ZIMRA).

It is also in the interest of the cultural groups to have audience with the Minister and spell out their concerns particularly the drummer Vambe, who is still battling the Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation (ZBC) on claims of originating the drumbeat that features in all news bulletins.

Recording companies by now would have had a clear picture of how the Minister will navigate around issues of politicisation of recording deals and barbs received from musicians who blame them for not marketing their products. The National Arts Council of Zimbabwe (NACZ), like others, is waiting to hear from the new man on the block.

Sadly, the Minister chose cricket as an entry point where his construction of the problems that are at ZC is wrong! Coltart believes that by including white cricketers, who are flourishing elsewhere in Europe because of better economies, will put the glitter back on cricket.

“When I look at Sean Ervine’s average at Hampshire, I say to myself here is a guy who should be playing for us. We need guys like that back.

“We need someone like Andy Flower to come back and coach our national team. The encouraging thing about cricket is that we can reclaim our former glory very quickly,” Coltart said in The Zimbabwe Independent of February 20. He said Zimbabwe could return to the Test arena sooner than anticipated.
“Subject to us addressing concerns over accounts in ZC, and subject to us getting all our players back to choose the best team, it is not impossible to get back our Test status as soon as possible. We have to get politics and racism out of sports and start to perform.”

He believes that by inspecting the ZC books, which have been okayed by a world reputable accounting firm, KPMG, and having the former players back, will make Zimbabwe play Test cricket again, but at the same time appears not know anything regarding the books at the ZC.

“I don’t know precisely what the situation is there. I have read the allegations and the defences. I want to know the truth and make recommendations to Cabinet. I certainly want to have sight of the reports.

“I don’t want to speculate and rely on rumour. I stand for transparency. Unless there is transparency in our sports bodies, we will continue to under-perform. Ineffectiveness affects ability to perform,” he remarked.

There are certain things that the Minister needs to know when dealing with sports people. Coltart must realise that sports fans want to see a representation in almost every discipline that reflects the population of the country. This is practiced, followed and adhered to everywhere in the world.

The West Indies cricket side is like that, England, Australia, India, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Kenya, New Zealand and Pakistan all follow that route.

In Zimbabwe, with him at the helm, people would expect the same where blacks dominate the various sporting disciplines including cricket, which is no longer a minority sport.

I would love to see Andy Flower back, but to support the current players and staff that exist at the ZC. As for coaching, he has set his sights on England and am sure he will relish the challenge that comes with his job.

The same thing applies to our football, I would love to see Bruce Grobbelaar return to the Warriors in some capacity to help us revive the sport. We have seen this happening in South Africa.

But when the black majority demand a larger slice of the cake, they are often labelled racists yet nine out of 10 times, it would be a lie. It happened in SA recently.

When a South African legislator demanded that the national rugby side, The Springboks, change its symbol or emblem, there was an outcry from white South African fans.

“The Springboks divide us. We have a responsibility to unite our country on one national emblem . . . I want you to observe the arrogance of white people over the Springboks emblem,” said the controversial chairman of SA Parliament’s sports portfolio committee Butana Komphela.
The reaction showed resistance and stoked up racial fires.

“Many people now see Mandela’s gesture (of reconciliation at the 1995 World Cup final) as a mistake,” Qasim Bhorat, a team doctor for the Soweto Rugby Club, was quoted as saying in an article in the UK’s Guardian newspaper.

“This is the last stand of the Afrikaner. They believe rugby belongs to them and they don’t want to give it up.”

Springbok coach Peter de Villiers became the first black South African to coach the national team. His appointment followed an outcry by African National Congress (ANC) officials who demanded that there be more blacks in the rugby side. Some unhappy white players, six months later, blackmailed the coach after he intended to drop one player from his team.

The Weekender reported that de Villiers was the victim of a blackmail attempt over player selections. The blackmail attempt allegedly involved an official and a player who were threatening to release damning video footage of his sexual escapades to the media if the player was dropped from the Springboks squad.

So Minister Coltart has his work cut out in trying to restore pride, competency and glory to our beleaguered sports. He has to tread carefully if expects good results in Sports and Culture.
In Education, teachers are still wary of him, but will soon find him a thorough professional but in sport — it could be a minefield.

Guthrie Munyuki
Harare

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Zimbabwe’s time running out

ABC
Wednesday, 6 May , 2009
Reporter: Andrew Geoghegan

TONY EASTLEY: Zimbabwe’s unity government has been trying to convince other countries and investors that real political and economic reform is underway in the country.

But the arrest of a group of prominent human rights activists overnight has only reinforced opinion that little has changed in Zimbabwe and that the heavy hand of Robert Mugabe is there for everyone to see.

Human rights lawyer David Coltart is Zimbabwe’s Education Minister.

He’s been telling Africa correspondent Andrew Geoghegan that time is running out for the Government.

ANDREW GEOGHEGAN: Are these charges trumped up? Certainly these people who have been detained say they were beaten up, they were tortured into confessing as being part of this plot to overthrow President Robert Mugabe.

DAVID COLTART: I have got no reason to dispute the allegations that they were tortured, which we all condemn unreservedly, but if there are allegations that have some basis in truth, well let the courts decide as soon as possible and let’s get it out of the way.

ANDREW GEOGHEGAN: David Coltart, is progress being made in Zimbabwe? Foreign investors are very keen to see something happen before they commit any money to the country.

DAVID COLTART: Well, it’s not surprising that foreign donors are reluctant because the agreement in some respects has not been implemented in its true spirit and sometimes even the letter of the agreement hasn’t been adequately implemented so in that context it’s hard to justify why western taxpayers money should be spent.

Having said that, to answer a number of your questions, has there been any progress, well yes there has been some progress.

Zimbabwe is a far more peaceful place this year than it was last year but of course we have not achieved much that we hoped that we would have achieved by this stage and that is largely because the international donors haven’t come to the party yet and there are clearly elements who are determined to derail this process and that is setting us back.

TONY EASTLEY: Human rights lawyer David Coltart, who is also the Zimbabwean Education Minister, speaking there with Andrew Geoghegan.

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Zimbabwe Teachers Strike Averted

VOA
By Peta Thornycroft
Harare
05 May 2009

Last week, the unions, two aligned to President Robert Mugabe’s ZANU-PF and one independent, threatened to strike if salaries were not increased beyond $100 a month.

But many teachers polled by VOA around Harare say they had no intention of going on strike. They say the call for a strike had come from ZANU-PF, not from the majority of teachers, who understand the government’s lack of funds.

Raymond Majongwe, president of the independent Progressive Teachers Union, says the threat of the strike was mostly being played out in the media and was fueled by statements from the ZANU-PF-aligned Zimbabwe Teachers Association.

He says a strike had not been widely debated and many teachers outside the urban areas did not know it was pending.

Majongwe told VOA that, before the formation of the unity government, the Zimbabwe Teachers Association had never spoken out on matters that affect the welfare of teachers. He says the union had remained silent when teachers, like himself, were persecuted by Mr. Mugabe’s government. ZimTA officials were not available for comment Tuesday.

Since the unity government was formed, teachers receive their pay in foreign currency. They now earn enough to buy food.

Education Minister David Coltart tells VOA that, before schools reopened for the current term, he and unions had agreed that teachers’ children would receive free education; banks would be encouraged to reduce their charges to teachers; and, they would negotiate a five-year benefits plan for teachers.
Coltart also says school fees will be dramatically slashed, but that parents will still have to pay a small amount each term.

Coltart says Zimbabwe’s education infrastructure is a national tragedy. Even first-class schools, which used to compete favorably with private schools, are now shells, without windows, chairs and desks. He says even plumbing no longer exists.

Coltart also tells VOA that few schools have text books and that, in his view, Mr. Mugabe’s ZANU-PF government severely neglected education for the last 20 years.

Zimbabwe’s tertiary education system is also in a state of virtual collapse. Less than 70 students registered for the second semester at the main University of Zimbabwe campus, last month, because students could not pay fees in American dollars. Students say not a single toilet is working on the large campus in Harare.

A large private university says its foreign funds were looted by the central bank, last year, and it cannot open for business this semester.

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Zimbabwe: ‘clothes are a luxury’

Channel 4 News
5 May 2009

At the start of a new school term in Zimbabwe one teacher cannot even afford to replace her shoes on her wages, writes Helen.

“Government coffers are bare” was the message to school teachers from Education Minister David Coltart. Promises of increases coming (hopefully from the donor community) and the waiving of school fees for the children of teachers, broke the strike threatening the re-opening of schools on Tuesday.

It’s a short term solution in a country running on promises and the good will of an exhausted and impoverished population. Even the promises are cause for much scepticism. Everyone knows that as long as the unity government does not address the fundamental issues of human rights and law order, international aid is not going to be forthcoming.

“Clothes are a luxury,” one teacher told me a few days ago as we talked about whether she would go back to work or not. “How can I stand in the classroom with these talking shoes?” she asked me. The teacher lifted her foot and showed me the sole peeling away from the upper and flapping at every footstep.

A qualified senior school teacher with twenty years experience, the woman said she does not have a car, computer or even a mobile phone and her life has been reduced to survival levels.

“I was thinking of going South to work as a maid for three months,” the teacher told me. It’s something that many of her colleagues have been doing: going to South Africa and working as cleaners, child minders, house workers or cooks in order to earn enough money to survive on for a few months when they come back to Zimbabwe.

All government teachers are earning US$100 a month which is called an “allowance” and an additional Zimbabwe dollar amount which is deposited into local bank accounts.

The Zimbabwe dollar component of the monthly salary is worthless as the local currency has been suspended and there aren’t even any bank notes in circulation anymore. Why the government continues making Zimbabwe dollar payments to civil servants is a complete mystery and an example of the total confusion prevailing at all levels of the country.

Two months ago a normal residential telephone account was the equivalent of US$2, this month it is US$300.

Clothes being a luxury for a teacher is the tip of the iceberg for the crisis situation facing all civil servants. Telephone accounts for April have just come out. The bills are not delivered or posted to customers but instead are dumped in cardboard boxes at the telephone company offices. Not in alphabetical or address order, you have to sort through thousands of bills looking for your name on an account.

Two months ago a normal residential account was the equivalent of US$2, this month it is US$300.

‘That’s more than 3 months of my pay,” the teacher said as we bemoaned the outrageous charges being demanded of residents in the town. Businesses are in an equally perilous state: where they were paying US$50 two months ago, now their accounts are for over US$2,000.

The situation for school children is equally impossible. As I write this blog on the first day of the new school term, two children, perhaps 8 and 10, are sitting in a tree picking guavas at the house next door.

“Hello,” I said to them. “Why aren’t you at school today?”

Giggling and squirming and looking at their feet, the boy finally answered: “no money”. Urban children are required to pay US$50 a term in school fees. Their parents are unemployed.

Zimbabwe is stuck in a chicken and egg situation. Aid is desperately needed but everyone, even struggling teachers, says it must not come until the old leadership stick to the agreements and free the media, restore law and order, restore human rights and share the power.

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18 Zimbabwe activists jailed again

Daily Nation
5 May 2009

A Zimbabwe court today ordered 18 opposition activists facing charges of terrorism back to prison after they were indicted for trial next month in a move that will spark fresh tensions in a new unity government.

The activists, including leading human rights activist Jestina Mukoko, say they were abducted by state security agents from their homes last year and tortured to force them to confess to planning to remove President Robert Mugabe from power.

The activists, who also include several Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) members, were granted bail in March with the consent of state prosecutors.

“We were surprised by the magistrate’s decision as we were making prior arrangements with the state. She just said the matter was now outside her jurisdiction and remanded them in custody,” Alec Muchadehama, one of the defence lawyers, said.

Mr Muchadehama said the 18 had been indicted for a trial which starts next month. Lawyers were preparing to apply for bail at Zimbabwe’s High Court later today.

Long-time rivals Mugabe and Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai of the MDC formed a unity government in February after months of wrangling, but sharp differences remain over issues such as the review of the posts of central bank governor and attorney-general.

“Today’s ruling seriously threatens not only the life and health of the inclusive government, but its longevity and durability,” the MDC said in a statement.

President Mugabe has yet to swear in Mr Roy Bennett, a senior white MDC member, as deputy Agriculture minister.

Mr Bennett was locked up in prison for a month in February on charges of plotting terrorism.
Western donors, who have demanded that the unity government carry out wider political and media reforms, and called for the release of all political prisoners before committing funding, are likely to raise concerns.

“As the MDC, we are very concerned with this matter as it adds to a long litany of breaches to the Global Political Agreement (signed by President Mugabe and Mr Tsvangirai on September 15),” an MDC official told Reuters.

Some of the suspects had fallen ill and were put under police guard in hospital.

Ms Mukoko, the director of the Zimbabwe Peace Project, was granted medical treatment at a previous court hearing after she said she had been tortured.

In another development, teachers in Zimbabwe have called off a strike despite their wage demands not being met, while the government has slashed school fees for the new term.

Education Minister Senator David Coltart said the government had no money to raise their salaries, but he had agreed to help teachers by giving their children free schooling.

Teachers’ groups said they accepted the government was struggling for funds and needed time to raise revenue.

Teachers are paid $100 (£66) a month but unions wanted four times as much.

Senator Coltart has been in protracted talks with unions and foreign aid donors to make sure the schools reopened in time for the new term today.

The Zimbabwean Government has also met unions’ demand for a huge cut in school fees to get children back into the classroom.

Zimbabwe’s state education system had virtually collapsed until the new power-sharing government agreed to pay teachers in foreign currency in February.

Coltart said that although the new term would begin, the education system was a “shadow” of what it had been.

“The doors may open, there may be children in the classrooms and teachers teaching, but there are very few textbooks in the rural areas and many schools do not have roofs or doors or windows,” he told the BBC. Mr Coltart, a former opposition activist, said the state of the service was down to two decades of neglect by President Mugabe’s government.

Raymond Majongwe, head of the Progressive Teachers’ Union, said going back to work was the “responsible” thing to do, even though all their demands had not been met.

He told the BBC’s Network Africa programme: “We have no reason to proceed with the strike action that will do nothing but confuse the situation that we are trying to ultimately address.

“As the government does not have the capacity to address the problems that it faces, so the donors need to chip in.”

He said they were pleased Zimbabwe’s Government had agreed to cut school fees from between $50 (£33) and $150 (£100) a term to a maximum of $20 (£13) and that teachers’ children would be exempt from fees.

Reports by Reuters and BBC online

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Zimbabwe unions call off teachers’ strike

AFP
May 5, 2009

HARARE — Zimbabwe’s teachers unions on Tuesday called off a threatened strike at state schools after the government agreed to scrap fees for children of teachers.

“We are going back to work but that does not mean teachers are happy,” Tendai Chikowore, president of the Zimbabwe Teachers’ Association, told AFP.

“The government has tried to meet one of our demands. We appreciate the efforts being made to address our concerns and we decided to reciprocate by going back to work.”

The union last week threatened to strike when schools opened Tuesday following a long holiday. They are demanding an increase from their 100 US dollar salaries, which they say is too little to meet basic needs and pay school fees for their children.

On Monday, Education Minister David Coltart announced a school fees exception for teachers’ families and slashed fees for all students at government schools.

The Progressive Teachers’ Union of Zimbabwe also said its members were going back to work but urged the country’s power-sharing government to spruce up its image in order to gain the confidence of donors, whose support is needed to revive the education system.

“We are going back to work although we did not have all our demands met,” PTUZ secretary-general Raymond Majongwe told AFP.

“The government is broke so there is not much that can be done to address our grievances. Donors have made it clear that they will only come in if the government addresses such issues as the violation of the rule of law.

“We should push for the government to address all the outstanding issues.”

Schoolteachers returned to work in February following the creation of a unity government, after striking since early last year to demand payment in foreign currency to cope with galloping inflation.
The government this year abandoned the local currency, and the unity government offered the 100 US dollar payments as an interim step toward improving salaries.

Coltart, who took office when the Movement for Democratic Change joined the government, had agreed to review their demands while seeking international aid.

The unity government is seeking 8.5 billion dollars over three years to revive the economy and restore public services, including schools and hospitals.

Major donors have been reluctant to give new aid until the government makes more tangible reforms to break from President Robert Mugabe’s past policies, which are blamed for wrecking the economy and trampling on human rights.

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Coltart Orders Dramatic Cut in Fees, Teachers’ Children Exempt

ZIMDIASPORA
TUESDAY, 05 MAY 2009
By LOVEMORE MAZIVISA

ZIMBABWE’S Education Minister Senator David Coltart ordered a dramatic cut in public school fees on Monday as the government moved to save the country’s education system from collapse.

Public school teachers who are paid just US$100 monthly allowances along with the rest of the country’s civil servants will also be exempt from paying fees for their children, the minister said after a meeting with international donors and teachers’ unions.

Parents will pay just US$20 at the most expensive government secondary schools, down from US$280 in the first term in the interim fees schedule announced by the minister.

Pupils at primary schools in poor neighbourhoods and rural areas will pay just US$5 for the second term, with their counterparts in the low density areas paying US$10.

Pupils enrolled at government secondary schools in high density suburbs will pay US$10, and their counterparts in more affluent districts will be charged US$20.

Ordinary Level and Advanced Level candidates will pay US$10 as examination fees while the treasury picks up the rest of the costs.

Coltart said over the weekend that most parents were worse off since March when he announced fees for the first term.

“When the fees were set in March, the assumption was that we would get balance of payments to kick-start the economy,” Coltart said. “But this has not materialised and parents are worse off than before.”

The hard-working minister told a press conference on Monday that cabinet would shortly be meeting to fix substantive tuition fees. Parents who have already paid more than the statutory amount would be credited for any overpayments, he added.

Coltart said: “Because the fees have been reduced, school development committees will have to raise the balance of the money needed to run schools through levies. Accordingly, all Government schools are to urgently hold meetings in terms of the Education Act, to agree with parents the amount of levies to be charged and thereafter to seek the approval from the permanent secretary.

“Those parents who have already paid fees will have that amount deducted from the amount now due in terms of this statement and will only have to pay any shortfall. In the case of those who have paid in excess of the approved fees, they will have the excess credited to any amount due in respect of the second or third term fees.”

The minister also urged private schools to charge reasonable fees.

“Private schools are required by law to seek approval for their fees from the Permanent Secretary. We, however, face the real danger of brain drain in these private schools so while I am concerned about parents with pupils in private schools, we need not undermine our private schools.”

Meanwhile teachers’ unions have urged their members to attend the opening of the second school term on Tuesday after putting back plans for a nationwide strike for improved pay.

Union leaders from the Zimbabwe Teachers Association, the Teachers’ Union of Zimbabwe and the Progressive Teachers Union of Zimbabwe met Coltart and international donor agencies on Monday
“We need to give the unity government a chance, and so we are asking our members to keep working,” said Takavafira Zhou, the President of the Progressive Teacher Union of Zimbabwe. “But we can only wait until June and then we won’t have a choice but to embark on a mass action.”

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Zimbabwe teachers continue to be harassed

Zimbabwe Telegraph
By MIKE MAKOMO
Published: Tuesday, May 05, 2009

HARARE – Despite the creation of a power-sharing government in February 2009, teachers in Zimbabwe continue to be victims of harassment and intimidation, human rights organisations have said.

The situation is being coupled with new threats by teachers to refuse going back to school before their salaries are raised.

They report teachers being threatened with violence by supporters of ZANU-PF, President Robert Mugabe’s political party.

Teachers have expressed serious concerns about working in an environment in which they fear for their safety.

Many teachers were targeted during the 2008 elections, particularly those working in rural schools, and fear that they will be especially vulnerable in future elections, scheduled to take place in 2010.
Their employer, the Public Services Commission (PSC), a statutory body which employs all government workers, has done nothing to guarantee the safety of teachers.

None of the reported incidents of torture and ill-treatment of teachers that occurred in 2008 has been investigated and no one has been brought to justice.

Human rights organisation Amnesty International has called on the PSC to work with the Zimbabwe Republic Police to ensure that impartial and independent investigations are carried out into the torture and ill-treatment of teachers and other civil servants that took place between the March and June elections in 2008.

“Those found to be responsible should be brought to justice and victims should receive redress,” said Amnesty in a statement.

“Such measures would be a first step to ensuring the safety of the teachers and improving the environment in which they are working.”

During Zimbabwe’s last election, teachers were singled out as perceived supporters of the Movement for Democratic Change, the political party that was then in opposition, or as a result of their affiliation to the Progressive Teachers’ Union of Zimbabwe (PTUZ).

The PTUZ recorded the deaths of seven teachers affiliated to the union and the harassment, intimidation and even torture of more than 60 other members.

Many teachers were forced to take refuge in urban areas or in neighbouring countries such as Botswana and South Africa, driven from their work places by security forces, and other ZANU-PF supporters, including veterans of Zimbabwe’s war of independence.

Many schools in rural areas were closed after ZANU-PF supporters, often led by soldiers, turned some schools into bases from which they operated in the run up to the June presidential election in 2008.

In a meeting with Trade Union leaders on the 4 May Education Minister David Coltart said that harrasment of teachers would not be tolerated.

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South Africa says Zimbabweans welcome without visas

AP
4 May 2009

JOHANNESBURG – In an effort to reduce waves of Zimbabwean asylum seekers, South Africa announced Monday that its neighbor’s citizens can travel here on a free 90-day visitor’s permit and apply to do casual work during their stay.

Immigration minister Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula appeared with her two Zimbabwean counterparts to make the announcement. Zimbabwe has two home affairs ministers under a power-sharing agreement implemented earlier this year to try to resolve the country’s economic and political crises.

Mapisa-Nqakula said the new regulations came into effect May 1, but acknowledged bureaucratic hurdles could slow implementation.

“We have a significant number of economic migrants from Zimbabwe,” Mapisa-Nqakula said.
South African officials have been overwhelmed by Zimbabweans, who apply for asylum at a rate of more than 8,000 a day, and they believe many will now opt for the visitor’s permit. Most asylum seekers are denied because South African officials believe most Zimbabweans are not fleeing out of fear or persecution, but to find work as their economy collapses.

Monday’s announcement could be seen as an acknowledgment that South Africa does not expect the stream of Zimbabweans to slow soon, despite hopes raised by the power-sharing government formed by Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe’s ZANU-PF and the Movement for Democratic Change.

International donors have been slow to respond to calls for help from the unity government, waiting to see whether it endures and fulfills promises to shore up democracy and rule of law in Zimbabwe after years of abuses blamed on Mugabe. The political marriage by the rivals has been shaky – as illustrated by the appearance of two Zimbabwean home affairs ministers alongside Mapisa-Nqakula.

Both parties insisted on control of the key ministry, which also oversees police accused of attacks on Mugabe’s rivals, and in the end they had to share it.

On Monday, the ZANU-PF co-minister, Kembo Mohadi, insisted Zimbabwe had no political prisoners. Some Zimbabweans in South Africa have said they cannot return until political prisoners are freed. Mohadi’s MDC counterpart, Giles Mutsekwa, disagreed, saying party leaders were still negotiating on how to address the issue of political prisoners.

But Mutsekwa added that all the parties were”committed to this inclusive government,” adding: “The people of Zimbabwe have not got any hope other than pinning their hopes on this inclusive government.

The unity government was formed to turn around an economic crisis that began with a land redistribution campaign in 2000. The often-violent campaign disrupted the agriculture-based economy of what was once the region’s breadbasket. Mugabe blames Western sanctions for his country’s economic woes, even though they are targeted at him and his cronies and not the country.

According to the United Nations, 83 percent of Zimbabweans live on less than $2 a day, and 7 million, more than half the population, receive food aid. Zimbabweans come to South Africa to earn money to send back to relatives, or to buy food and other necessities that have been scarce at home.

Human Rights Watch, among several international rights groups that have been pressing South Africa to ease restrictions on Zimbabwean immigration for humanitarian reasons, called the change outlined Monday a “positive development.” But Tiseke Kasambala, a Johannesburg-based Zimbabwe expert for Human Rights Watch, said in an interview that the change needed to be widely advertised and thoroughly explained.

Human Rights Watch has complained that a directive issued by the Home Affairs Ministry earlier this month to stop deporting Zimbabweans for six months has not been followed on the ground, in part because South African police are unaware of the new rules.

Kasambala said Zimbabweans need to know they can still apply for asylum if they feel that is warranted, as well as for longer term visas to enter South Africa.

She said South Africans who might see the Zimbabweans as competition for scarce jobs in a depressed economy should understand that employers who might once have seen the Zimbabweans as easy to exploit would now more likely follow minimum wage and other employment rules for all job seekers.

In Zimbabwe Monday, teachers’ unions called off a strike for higher pay that was to have started Tuesday.

Teacher and other salaries had been decimated by inflation. The new coalition government, helped by donors and the United Nations, began paying teachers $100 a month in hard currency in February. Unions had been demanding that figure be trebled or quadrupled, but said after a daylong meeting with the U.N. children’s fund and Education Minister David Coltart Monday that they understood the government was struggling to raise funds. The teachers accepted free schooling for their own children and a share of yet-to-be-determined levies that local school boards were to impose on parents.

“We are appealing to our members to go to classes tomorrow while we allow the government to raise funds so that we can get reasonable salaries,” said Raymond Majongwe, head of the Progressive Teachers Union. “Let us give this inclusive government a chance and let’s be responsible and educate our children.

Sifiso Ndlovu, chief executive the Zimbabwe Teachers Association, said while teachers understood the government’s difficulties, they wanted it to move quickly to raise money.

“All our members must be in school tomorrow,” Ndlovu said.

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