MDC Minister Roy Bennett Arrested in Harare as new Cabinet sworn in

VOA
By Peta Thornycroft
Harare
13 February 2009

Roy Bennett, the MDC’s choice to become deputy agriculture minister, was reportedly seized at a Harare airport Friday, hours before the ministers in the unity government were to be sworn in. His arrest has dampened the spirits of many Zimbabweans looking forward to a period of rebuilding Zimbabwe.

Roy Bennett had been through immigration and had boarded a small aircraft with a flight plan to Nelspruit, an eastern South African town. As the aircraft was taxiing down the runway it was called back.

Meanwhile, legislators were gathering at state house for swearing in of the government of national unity after the ceremony was delayed for five hours.

The MDC said in a statement the delay was the result of in-fighting in ZANU-PF over which of the 22 top party officials gathered for the ceremony, would be formally appointed. ZANU-PF is allowed 15 Cabinet posts and the two MDC parties together, have 16. Eventually it was sorted out as per the political agreement.

David Coltart is the newly appointed education minister and has been handed one of the toughest jobs in the Cabinet. Coltart told VOA his first job is going to be getting teachers back into the classrooms.

“The biggest challenge is to persuade teachers to get back into the classroom, that they are going to be paid a viable, live-able wage, that come the end of February, they will get a pay packet in foreign exchange,” he said.

Coltart said the unity government can only succeed if it receives foreign funding. He said Zimbabwe had been destroyed and needed the kind of assistance Germany received after World War II. He said the only way to get teachers back to work was to pay them adequately in foreign currency, which Zimbabwe does not have.

“Well that is where we have to persuade the international community, the IMF, the World Bank, the EU, the United States, and the United Kingdom, that this agreement will be stillborn, unless they come in with some interim help,” he said.

Coltart said the main difficulty in raising donor funds was the central bank through which all foreign money has to pass. Coltart said securing foreign currency to pay teachers would therefore require a provision that it be paid in ways that exclude the central bank from the process.

“Assuming that we cannot get a competent person into the Reserve Bank, we will have to devise measures to ensure that western taxpayers money goes to what it was intended for; and that may entail, direct financing of the rehabilitation of the schools infrastructure and some mechanism whereby money can go direct to teachers and not go through this conduit of the reserve bank,” he said.

Roy Bennett, the MDC’s choice to become deputy agriculture minister, was reportedly seized at a Harare airport Friday, hours before the ministers in the unity government were to be sworn in. His arrest has dampened the spirits of many Zimbabweans looking forward to a period of rebuilding Zimbabwe.

Roy Bennett had been through immigration and had boarded a small aircraft with a flight plan to Nelspruit, an eastern South African town. As the aircraft was taxiing down the runway it was called back.

Meanwhile, legislators were gathering at state house for swearing in of the government of national unity after the ceremony was delayed for five hours.

The MDC said in a statement the delay was the result of in-fighting in ZANU-PF over which of the 22 top party officials gathered for the ceremony, would be formally appointed. ZANU-PF is allowed 15 Cabinet posts and the two MDC parties together, have 16. Eventually it was sorted out as per the political agreement.

David Coltart is the newly appointed education minister and has been handed one of the toughest jobs in the Cabinet. Coltart told VOA his first job is going to be getting teachers back into the classrooms.

“The biggest challenge is to persuade teachers to get back into the classroom, that they are going to be paid a viable, live-able wage, that come the end of February, they will get a pay packet in foreign exchange,” he said.

Coltart said the unity government can only succeed if it receives foreign funding. He said Zimbabwe had been destroyed and needed the kind of assistance Germany received after World War II. He said the only way to get teachers back to work was to pay them adequately in foreign currency, which Zimbabwe does not have.

“Well that is where we have to persuade the international community, the IMF, the World Bank, the EU, the United States, and the United Kingdom, that this agreement will be stillborn, unless they come in with some interim help,” he said.

Coltart said the main difficulty in raising donor funds was the central bank through which all foreign money has to pass. Coltart said securing foreign currency to pay teachers would therefore require a provision that it be paid in ways that exclude the central bank from the process.

“Assuming that we cannot get a competent person into the Reserve Bank, we will have to devise measures to ensure that western taxpayers money goes to what it was intended for; and that may entail, direct financing of the rehabilitation of the schools infrastructure and some mechanism whereby money can go direct to teachers and not go through this conduit of the reserve bank,” he said.

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New unity government nearly still-born

Zimbabwe Times
13 February 2009
By Our Correspondent

HARARE – Zimbabwe’s new unity government suffered a near still-birth when mainstream Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) ministerial nominees openly refused to take part in the swearing-in ceremony at State House in Harare on Friday.

The MDC members protested after Zanu-PF had apparently attempted to trick the MDC by swearing into office five more state ministers without reaching an agreement with their partners in the coalition as agreed in terms of the Global Political Agreement.

As a result the ceremony was delayed for close to three hours much to the chagrin of the hundreds of guests who thronged the State House grounds to witness the historic ceremony.
The event was supposed to start at about 12 noon but only kicked off sometime after 4 pm after Zanu PF had agreed to remove from the list the five extra ministers and agreed that MDC appoint one Minister of State while it admit two.

In the hushed process the the three political leaders held a closed-door meeting in the State House dining room with Southern African Development Community (SADC) Chairman Kgalema Monthlathe and mediator Thabo Mbeki.

President Robert Mugabe’s Chief of Protocol, Samuel Kajese was heard while literally begging MDC MPs to join Zanu-PF MPs in the ceremonial rituals. The MDC MPs openly refused to barge until the three principals had reached a workable solution.

“If we have no agreement then we will not go there for the swearing in. We have counted one by one and why do you have many ministers than the ones agreed under GPA. Why can’t we first agree,” said MDC’s Tendai Biti who was later sworn in as the Minister of Finance.

“How many are your Ministers, we will count again if they are more than the agreed we will not go in there.”

But Kajese who was visibly at pains to just have things push through later responded saying, “Please, please lets get on with the business, there are state ministers to be sworn in today.”

Mugabe later on swore into office the Zanu PF, mainstream MDC and MDC-M ministers.
Notable appointments from Zanu-PF are Minister of Information, Webster Shamhu, of State Security, Sydney Sekeramayi and Kembo Mohadi who retained Home Affairs that he will now share with Giles Mutswekwa of the MDC. Emmerson Mnangangwa, long regarded as having presidential ambitions was moved up from Rural Housing to Defence.

The five ministers who lost out following the drama that was witnessed at State House are Former Speaker of Parliament and Zanu PF Chairman, John Nkomo, Health Minister David Parirenyatwa, Deputy Agriculture Minister Sylvester Nguni, Acting Minister of Information, Paul Mangwana and Minister of State, Flora Bhuka.

They had participated in rehearsals for the event, only to be left out at the last minute.
In an open expression of disappointment, Mangwana stood with his wife in the State House car park while the event was still taking place.

“I am not a (full) minister for now unless something changes,” said Mngwana when approached for a comment.

The eventful past 48 hours also saw the mainstream MDC axing two of its ministerial nominees Eddie Cross and Abednico Bhebhe who had earlier been announced as part of the party’s cabinet line-up.

The two were replaced by Human Rights activist and former Bulawayo Agenda Executive Director, Gordon Moyo and Binga MP, Joel Gabuza Gabuza.

Speculation was rife that the two could have been sacrificed to pacify the dissenting voices from Matebeleland region who had complained that the region had very few representatives in the new government.

The appointment of Shamu to the Ministry of Information put paid to widespread speculation that a previous encumbent, Prof Jonathan Moyo was, by his actions and utterances, gearing for re-appointment to the ministry that he controversially devastatingly managed until he was booted out in 2005.

Moyo is the Member of Parliament for Tsholotsho North and is partly credited with master-minding Mugabe’s controversial re-election in June 2008 in an electyion in which he was the only candidate.

The swearing-in ceremony revealed the extent to which Mugabe had gone to retain the Zanu PF old guard. He kept his trusted and hardworking lieutenant, Patrick Chinamasa, in the crucial ministry of Justice and Parliamentary Affairs.

The Ministry of State for National Security in the President’s Office went to former Defence Minister, Sydney Sekeramayi while Herbert Murerwa, who was fired by Mugabe as Finance Minister two years ago, bounced back to take over the Lands and Rural Resettlement Ministry.
Samuel Mumbengegwi retained the Foreign Affairs Ministry while Joseph Made, who manages Mugabe’s multiple farms, was strategically redeployed in the Agriculture, Mechanization and Irrigation Development ministry.

Former Minister of Industry and International Trade, Obert Mpofu was redeployed at Mines and Mining Development while Ignatius Chombo retained his Local Government, Urban and Rural Development portfolio.

Shurugwi North legislator, Francis Nhema is the Minister of Environment and Natural Resources Management while Nicholas Goche, one of the two Zanu-PF negotiators who brokered the power-sharing deal was rewarded with the Transport and Infrastructural Development ministry.
Saviour Kasukuwere, otherwise the youngest minister in the Zanu PF line up, is the Youth Development, Indigenization and Empowerment Minister, with the Women’s Affairs, Gender and Community Development ministry for Mutoko legislator, Olivia Muchena.

Despite her legendary failure to win any parliamentary seat in the opposition dominated Matebeleland region, Stembiso Nyoni was again allowed to retain her Small and Medium Enterprises and Cooperative Development ministry.

Stan Mudenge, one of the longest serving ministers in Mugabe’s cabinet, will retain his Higher and Tertiary Education Ministry while Masvingo South legislator, while Walter Muzembi takes over Tourism.

Didymus Mutasa, who retains the State Security Minister, completes the Zanu PF list of substantive ministers.

Zanu-PF Ministers of State are Paul Mangwana, Sylvester Nguni, Flora Bhuka, John Nkomo and David Parirenyatwa.

Professor Welshman Ncube, secretary general in the Arthur Mutambara led MDC is now Industry and Commerce Minister while his deputy and partner in the protracted unity talks, Priscilla Misihairabwi-Mushonga becomes Regional Integration and International Co-operation minister.
Khumalo Senator David Coltart, the only elected official in the Mutambara led MDC, is now the new Minister of Education, Sports and Culture.

Tendai Biti, who led the list of ministerial nominees in the Morgan Tsvangirai-led MDC was sworn is as Finance Minister, while Engineer Elias Mudzuri was confirmed as Energy and Power Development minister.

Theresa Makone was sworn-in as Public Works minister while former Associated Newspapers of Zimbabwe CEO, Samuel Sipepa Nkomo took over the Water Resources and Development ministry which had initially been allocated to Nkayi West legislator Abednico Bhebhe of the Mutambara party.

Kwekwe senator, Henry Madzorera was confirmed as Health and Child Welfare minister while Eliphas Mukonoweshuro becomes Public Service minister.

Other confirmed ministers in the mainstream MDC include Elton Mangoma (Economic Planning and Development), Professor Henry Dzinotyiwei (Science and Technology), Fidelis Mhashu (Housing and Social Amenities), Advocate Eric Matinenga (Constitutional and Parliamentary Affairs), Nelson Chamisa (Information Communication Technology), Pauline Mpariwa (Labour and Social Welfare) and Joel Gabuza (State Enterprises and Parastatals).

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Mutambara set to pick Coltart for Education Minister

New Zimbabwe.com
By Lebo Nkatazo
Posted to the web: 09/02/2009 02:47:13

REFORMS: David Coltart set to be named Education Minister by Arthur Mutambara this week

ARTHUR Mutambara has chosen Senator David Coltart (Khumalo) as the man to overhaul Zimbabwe’s education system, two Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) sources said on Sunday.

As Education Minister, Coltart, 52, will play a central role in reforming Zimbabwe’s declining education system, with the urgent task of getting teachers to abandon work boycotts and ensuring schools which are still closed open.

Coltart, a respected lawyer and former MP for Bulawayo South, joined Mutambara’s MDC faction following a split from founding MDC leader, Morgan Tsvangirai in 2005.

Mutambara’s MDC will nominate three ministers and one deputy minister to the 31-member Cabinet which will be sworn-in on Friday, two days after Morgan Tsvangirai and Mutambara are sworn-in as Prime Minister and Deputy Prime Minister respectively.

Coltart would be a high profile pick for Mutambara, who will also name Bulilima West MP Moses Mzila Ndlovu and the party’s secretary general Welshman Ncube to the cabinet.

Ncube could be handed the Industry and Commerce portfolio, with Mzila Ndlovu landing the Regional Integration and International Trade ministry, according to two officials who spoke to New Zimbabwe.com.

Tsvangirai will name 13 ministers and 6 deputy ministers before Friday’s swearing-in ceremony, and Mugabe is expected to name 15 ministers and 8 deputies in line with a power sharing agreement signed on September 15 last year.

Writing in South Africa’s Business Day newspaper, Dumisani Muleya, the news editor of the Zimbabwe Independent newspaper said “the quality of ministers and the policies they will generate will determine whether the government will be able to pluck Zimbabwe out of the deep hole it is in.”

Mugabe, who will remain President, is set to include a number of his Zanu PF old guard officials in his list, raising doubts about the political will and operational capacity of the new cabinet to introduce much-needed political and economic reforms.

Zanu PF sources say Mugabe’s list of 15 ministers includes his close confidants and party strategists Emmerson Mnangagwa, Sydney Sekeramayi, Didymus Mutasa, Patrick Chinamasa, Nicholas Goche, Ignatius Chombo, Joseph Made, Olivia Muchena, John Nkomo, Kembo Mohadi, Obert Mpofu, Simbarashe Mumbengegwi, Paul Mangwana, Sithembiso Nyoni and Webster Shamu.

If confirmed, Coltart will take charge of an education system which charities and teachers’ unions warn needs radical transformation.

In a new report, the Save the Children charity says many teachers have little choice but to spend their time scraping together enough to survive rather than heading back to the classroom – two weeks after the new school term opened. Many are on strike, demanding their wages be paid in United States dollars.

At the end of 2008, only 20 percent of children were still attending school, down from 85 percent a year earlier, and that figure is likely to drop further, Save the Children warns.

The aid agency estimates that some 30,000 teachers dropped out of the education system by the end of 2008, a third of which are now living in South Africa.

Among the 70,000 left — many of whom have little training — morale is rock-bottom and desperate conditions are driving them to inflict corporal punishment and exploitation on their pupils, according to the charity.

“A generation is at risk of growing up without any education in Zimbabwe, and that will have catastrophic consequences for the country’s recovery,” said Rachel Pounds, the agency’s Zimbabwe director.

The U.N. Children’s Fund (UNICEF) plans to assess how many schools are functioning in the coming days.

“If schools don’t open, the fear is you’ll see a lot more people crossing the border (into South Africa),” said Shantha Bloemen, UNICEF’s spokesperson in Johannesburg.

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Tough Choices for Parties forming inclusive Government

The Standard
By Caiphas Chimhete and Kholwani Nyathi
Sunday 8th February 2009

LEADERS of the country’s three main political parties will this week be forced to do a major balancing act when they come up with their line-ups for cabinet appointments amid simmering divisions in all the camps.
According to a Southern African Development Community (Sadc) time-line that crossed the major hurdle with the passing of Constitution Amendment No.19, the formation of a new government should be completed by Friday.

President Robert Mugabe, MDC-T leader Morgan Tsvangirai and Arthur Mutambara reportedly had a busy weekend consulting in their circles about the Cabinet appointments and the exercise had ruffled some feathers.

Analysts say Mugabe whose previous cabinet appointments had been guided by politics of tribal balancing and warding off factionalism had the most daunting task, as he will only be restricted to 15 ministers.

Already there were murmurs of disapproval of the 84-year-old President’s intentions for Matabeleland where the spectre of mass defections looms if the region is not adequately catered for following moves to revive Zapu.

“Mugabe has already made a blunder by failing to appoint a non-constituency Senator from Bulawayo,” said a Zanu PF politburo member.

“John Nkomo is from Bulawayo and Joseph Msika is from Chiweshe and we can not saying they will represent people from that side.

“PF Zapu people have also been left out of the Joint Monitoring and Implementation Committee (Jomic), which means that he doesn’t see them playing a serious role in the future government.”

Emmerson Mnangagwa, Patrick Chinamasa, Oppah Muchinguri and Nicholas Goche, represent Zanu PF in Jomic, which is monitoring the implementation of the September 15 power- sharing agreement.

Mugabe, observers said, also had to reward people who engineered his violent re-election against all odds, a task that might not go down well with some Zanu PF factions.

Tsvangirai was also reportedly involved in a fire-fighting mission and had tasked his deputy president Thokozani Khupe to try and persuade his secretary-general Tendai Biti to take up a cabinet post in the inclusive government.

Biti has reportedly opted to remain out of government because he is opposed to the MDC-T’s decision to join Mugabe.

But Tsvangirai desperately needs him to co-chair the Ministry of Home Affairs with a Zanu PF appointee.
“It’s true Biti is threatening not to take a cabinet post and a similar stance has been taken by Chamisa (Nelson),” said a source.

“The reason they are giving is that they want to ensure that the party remains strong.

“Tsvangirai has already assigned Khupe to try and persuade them to re-think.”

The MDC-T leader has already informed several parliamentarians in his party about his plans to include them in his team.

“He (Tsvangirai) knows that Biti is the only person who can stand the heat from Zanu PF. He is tough and knows the issues,” said one of the sources.

Efforts to get a comment from Khupe and Chamisa were fruitless.

Tsvangirai is also faced with a tough balancing act as he has to reward MPs and Senators from Matabeleland who stood by him when the party split in 2005.

An influential MDC-T MP from Bulawayo said Tsvangirai was playing his cards close to his chest and dismissed the reports of fresh divisions in the party.

But indications were that he would disappoint the feminists in his movement as he only had space for three women in his line-up.

Even Mutambara would have headaches coming up with a line-up with his party divided between MPs and Senators and senior officials who lost elections.

Welshman Ncube, David Coltart, Priscilla Misihairambwi and Moses Mzila were the only people assured of posts.

This leaves the MPs who went against the party’s decision to support Paul Themba Nyathi ‘s bid to become Speaker of Parliament out in the cold.

“Its payback time for the MPs and if they protest they face the real risk of losing their seats since the agreement seems to be now working,” said an MDC MP.

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‘This time next year Mugabe will be gone’

Saturday Star
7 February 2009
By Peta Thornycroft

A Zimbabwean judge ended the treason trial of a top opposition leader this week, another indication that President Robert Mugabe’s party wants a proposed coalition government to work.

Magistrate Olivia Mariga ruled that Movement for Democratic Change secretary-general Tendai Biti had been improperly arrested on charges of plotting to overthrow Mugabe’s government.

The MDC had accused the government of basing the treason case against Biti on a forged document.
Ending the Biti case removed a major irritant between the MDC and Mugabe’s Zanu-PF party and raised hopes for the power-sharing government due to be formed next week.

Mugabe is understood to have signed Constitutional Amendment 19 after it sailed through parliament and the Senate on Thursday.

It provides the legislative foundation for a unity government, heralding what many Zimbabweans hope will be the beginning of the end of Mugabe’s era.

Front benchers of both Zanu-PF and members of on both sides of the house burst into song as they left the House of Assembly after adopting the bill: “We are now in agreement,” they sang, in a refrain used by both parties at political rallies.

Abdenico Bhebe, MP for Nkayi, one of the driest and poorest areas of south-western Zimbabwe, said: “Every fight must come to an end, and this is evidence that people are willing to try and work together to resolve the problems bedevilling the country.”

Paul Madzore, MP for a western Harare township where cholera is raging, said: “At least people in Zanu-PF have now come to the realisation that they are the main problem in Zimbabwe, and this time next year, Mugabe will be gone.”

Only two Western diplomats – one British – were in the speakers’ gallery during the 110-minute debate to push the amendment through a mutilated set of standing orders, which had earlier been fast-tracked through parliamentary processes to enable Mugabe to seize white farms.

Several African diplomats shook hands and grinned when the amendment was adopted by 184 legislators in the 210-seat parliament, which has several vacancies following the deaths of MPs since the March 2008 elections.

The amendment also passed easily through the upper house, the Senate, shortly afterwards.
“I am cautiously optimistic but I am not under any illusions of the problems ahead,” said MDC Senator David Coltart.

“This is the second time we have been given a chance as a nation,” he said, referring to the British-designed talks at Lancaster House in London which ended the civil war and white rule in 1980.
“Lancaster House failed because the draconian legislation of the Rhodesia Front was not amended, We didn’t renounce violence and we placed too much emphasis on the letter of the law instead of the spirit of the law.”

Amendment 19 came before parliament despite MDC statements the day before that it would be delayed because of Zanu-PF foot-dragging.

MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai rushed to Cape Town to consult President Kgalema Motlanthe, and this may have kick-started the process back on track.

At a Southern African Development Community summit last week, regional leaders had set the Zimbabweans a timetable to form a new government, including passage of Constitutional Amendment 19 by February 4.

The passing of the bill now means Tsvangirai could still be sworn in as prime minister – and Arthur Mutambara, leader of another MDC faction, as deputy prime minister – by February 11, as the SADC timetable requires.

Then cabinet ministers could be sworn in by the scheduled date of February 13, and the unity government could then be under way.

But while MDC legislators were putting their names to what they hope is the start of a new, more democratic era in Zimbabwe, Zanu-PF supporters, army and police and militia were still evicting white farmers off their land and detaining them.

Chris Jarret, who was kicked off his farm six years ago, was arrested this week in Bulawayo because police said he had failed to pick up his personal property when he was kicked off his land.

Two others, Gary Godfrey, who had managed to survive on a small piece of his original farm, was picked up by police 60km north of Bulawayo.

In a nearby district, Paul Rogers, who also continued to farm nine years after the land grab began because his property was never listed for “acquisition”, was also arrested.

“Police arrived with an eviction order, but had the wrong name of the farm, but took him anyway,” according to the men’s spokesperson in Bulawayo, Mac Crawford.

“These guys had been to the SADC Tribunal in November, which granted an order protecting them from any interference from the state.”

Another three white farmers have been in detention for three weeks, accused of training terrorists. The three ran outdoor adventure courses for school children about 50km south-east of Harare.

Four smallholding owners on the northern outskirts of Harare have been evicted in the past week, and on Thursday, well-known mining consultant John Holloway and his wife Sue, a teacher, were under siege on their plot in the Christon Bank suburb, west of Harare.

Every day, more farmers who have survived Mugabe’s land seizures are being summonsed to court to defend accusations that they are illegally remaining on their properties.

“This sudden rush appears to be connected with the establishment of a unity government. In other words, some people feel that time is running out for taking farms, so they have stepped up pressure to get in before it happens,” said one farmer, who asked not to be named. – Sapa-AFP

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New governors to be sworn in next Friday

SW Radioafrica
By Tichaona Sibanda
6 February 2009

New governors for the country’s ten political provinces are set to be sworn in, on the same day as ministers and their deputies.

This follows an agreement in South Africa between ZANU PF and MDC negotiators that Robert Mugabe must reverse the appointment of all current ten governors from his party. The appointments made late last year were in contravention of the Global Political Agreement, signed on 15th September by all the parties.

Party negotiators who met in South Africa on Wednesday have now agreed to use the results of the 29th March harmonised elections to allocate the governors’ posts. This formula now needs to be ratified by the party principals.

Under this formula, according to the Zimbabwe Independent, the MDC-T would get five posts, ZANU PF four and MDC-M one. The paper added MDC-T would appoint governors in Harare, Bulawayo, Matabeleland North, Masvingo and Manicaland. ZANU PF will have the three Mashonaland provinces and Midlands, the MDC-M would appoint a governor in Matabeleland South.

Morgan Tsvangirai is due to be sworn in as Prime Minister on Wednesday together with his two deputies, Thokozani Khupe and Arthur Mutambara. Our Harare correspondent Simon Muchemwa told us all political appointees who will serve the new government will be sworn in next week Friday.

‘When the government is in place, all ministers will be given the task of restructuring the government, starting with permanent secretaries and ambassadors. This is a big task because it also involves the restructuring of all government controlled parastatals,’ Muchemwa said.

A source also told us that the National Security Council Bill, which was also agreed to by the parties, will be tabled in parliament on Tuesday and is expected to sail through without a glitch. We understand from our sources that all state security organs, such as the army, police and the Central Intelligence Organisation, will fall under the NSC and will be chaired by Mugabe, with Tsvangirai deputizing him.

David Coltart, the Senator for Khumalo and a representative of the MDC-M, said in the senate on Thursday that institutions like the CIO have been used as partisan institutions to entrench Mugabe’s rule, and that should change. ‘There are institutions such as the CIO and the AG that have to be liberalized if we are sincere about forming a unity government.’

‘In the new government, people who have committed crimes must be prosecuted and face due process of the law,’ Coltart added.

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Now even the doubters can doff hats to peacemakers

Business Day
6 February 2009
By Tony Heard

A CACOPHONY of sceptics. That collective noun aptly describes the underlying disbelief over the South African-led peace effort in Zimbabwe. And it will persist.

This correspondent has some personal experience of it, because last year in Business Day he ventured a test swim against this particular tide. (Swimming without a wet suit in frozen Lake Zurich may be preferable.) He wrote that, after the elections for Zimbabwe’s parliament, won by the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), it was time to “doff our hats to the person who helped lead an undramatic initiative with such a dramatic outcome” (Thabo Mbeki).

The floodgates of criticism opened on his head with a vengeance. But this cold spa bath was bracing and diverting.

A relaunched Tony Leon — years ago picturesquely described by Kader Asmal as a “new leader in short pants” — led the charge, followed by the usual jaundiced journalists, even an inconsequential wag once in a racism row, some of the inveterate (I almost said invertebrate) letter writers, many close friends and left-liberal associates, indeed Uncle Tom Cobbly and all. They just climbed in, the attacks overflowing into other newspapers’ columns. There was imperious reference to “Heard’s premature announcement of vindication for Mbeki”; and, below the belt, a suggestion of “premature ejaculation”; on another plane, the discovery of a new phenomenon in the heavens: Planet Tony.

Well: En kyk hoe lyk hulle nou! (“See how they look now!”, the phrase, incidentally, from an expressive language without peer, which can conjure words such as eina-rok for miniskirt and brom-brom for reluctance.)

The fact is that the painstaking diplomacy led by Mbeki, in the tradition of the gruelling years of talks that finally wrapped up a defeated South Vietnam (and which honourable diplomatic tradition of dogged “jaw not war” may one day yet help the Middle East to follow Ulster and SA to relative sanity), has pulled off all-party agreement in Zimbabwe. The MDC-Tsvangirai has, yes, rather brom-brom, finally clicked in, as all-round pressure has mounted.

The MDC-T’s belated recruitment happened on that awkward media day, Friday, when the weekend newspaper brains trusts had already delivered their profound thoughts for print. That meant that the inconvenient, ineluctable task of giving Mbeki his due could be largely ducked over the weekend — while we all admittedly wait with bated breath to see if the old fox will try to play silly-buggers , like last time. There are already suggestions of Zanu (PF) “backtracking” and “spoiling”. We’ll see.
The difference now is the real prospect not only of an MDC-majority parliament but of a constitutionally appointed Prime Minister Tsvangirai on February 11. Next week, in the flesh! So the fox has limited options but to go along with it. And the looming United Nations (UN) Chapter Seven rottang (whip) or the International Criminal Court, plus no more spousal shopping, are hardly palatable alternatives.

Zimbabwe has always been a good example of limitations on power. It has seen the once-colonial force studiously averting the eyes while expecting, at times, a trifle too much of us South Africans, to pull chestnuts from the fire. The Zimbabwe hell has, till now, seen much talk but little progress from regional and continental bodies, and the UN (where it could rightly be said ultimately to belong). It has seen crushing challenges facing our own leaders as they just plod on. But we now see that their efforts have finally helped, together with Zimbabweans, to forge peace.

We can now, surely, change the tone of debate on Zimbabwe. Even if one is tempted to say “I told you so”, it is simply not helpful in public life, and can boomerang dangerously. Other empty phrases to avoid are “Something must be done!” (Yes, but what?) and the supremely sterile: “You too!” which once led an apartheid foreign minister, Eric Louw, to allege you-too-like that other countries indulged in discrimination; even announcing that obscure Laplanders suffered this fate. Really?

No, the important thing is to get on with the reconstruction and development of that land benighted for too long, and to generate the widest consensus within SA and the Southern African Development Community (SADC) — all led to greater heights by world exemplars such as Desmond Tutu and Jimmy Carter — to ensure that the valuable ground won does not just fritter away again.

As this correspondent wrote last year ( it still applies): “The path ahead for Zimbabwe is horrendously complicated.” Please take note! It qualifies one’s optimism. But the formal breakthrough, denied so long to southern Africa, is now surely confirmed.

Let us all appropriate it, and seek to make it work. Let us argue for lifting of sanctions as soon as possible. Let us reward those who really seek peace there. Let us help the currency to recover, and the economy to restart. Let us help the starving, the grievously ill and the pathetic victims of turpitude and abuse to rediscover their life, health and dignity.

Let us buy Zimbabwean goods, such as those snow-white, painstakingly made tablecloths brought to suburban doors by bowed old women, who stand to eat for a month if we purchase just one. Let us appeal to the international community, despite the economic meltdown created by the rich nations, to dig into their pockets and grab the chance to rebuild a broken land. It will be good for all our souls.
And let us not indulge in recriminations, but rather doff the hat to all who have pushed and shoved in the cause of getting a settlement; yes, even the critics of our own government’s efforts. Let us praise those ministers, and others, who have of late put more lead in the pencil in the push for peace. Let us help that potentially lovely land discover the lyrical “spirit of 1994” that made us a generous giant of Africa almost overnight under Nelson Mandela and Mbeki — though that status could, ironically, fade here just as the spirit takes root across the Limpopo.

Finally, let us give the new South African president and also the bloodied but unbowed SADC facilitator his due. Kgalema Motlanthe has proved to be a deft new thrust on this diplomatic quest for peace, speaking not only for us but for SADC and the African Union; and common sense.

Mbeki will pre-eminently be remembered as a negotiator and a problem-solver, whatever mistakes he may have made and enemies incurred. He and his team, most notably the moral and modest public servant, Frank Chikane, and low-profile adviser and successful peacemaker Mojanku Gumbi at his side, seem to have finally pulled the proverbial rabbit out of the hat, we all hope.

May we all be blessed, here in southern Africa, with success, for a change, in this most wretched matter. And if it goes the other way, we shall simply have, as US President Barack Obama said recently in a different context, to pick ourselves up and dust ourselves off and begin picking up the pieces again; and plod on, and on, and on. There is no other way. As Zimbabwean senator David Coltart said in September: “But work this must.” Period.

• Heard, an adviser to the government since 1994, is a former editor of the Cape Times.

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Liberalise CIO, says Coltart

Zimbabwe Times
6th February 2009
By Raymond Maingire

HARARE –David Coltart, the Senator for Khumalo representing the Mutambara-led MDC, has called for the liberalization of the Central Intelligence Organisation (CIO) and the Attorney General’s (AG) office, saying they have been used as partisan institutions to entrench President Robert Mugabe’s rule.
As parliamentarians across the political divide celebrated and spoke in praise of the unanimous passing of Constitutional Amendment. No 19 Bill on Thursday, Coltart dared to talk tough on the new developments.

“There are institutions such as the CIO and the AG that have to be liberalized if we are sincere about forming a unity government,” Coltart told fellow senators shortly before the Upper House voted on the Bill on Thursday.

“In the new government, people who have committed crimes must be prosecuted and face due process of the law.

“Zimbabweans should once again be allowed to claim their rights. That right involves the right to seek legal representation, the right to be arrested and not abducted.”

Coltart said in the all inclusive government the courts should be allowed their independence to determine criminal matters without undue political interference.

The outspoken legislator said it took more than tolerance for all the parties to agree to what he described as a flawed deal.

“This agreement is flawed, it is imperfect,” he said.

“There are aspects that I do not like about the Bill. In fact, there is no party represented here today that is fully satisfied with it.

“The law is flawed because there are fearsome protagonists who shall now have to work together. We have to face the challenges that lie ahead in the context of the mistrust and disagreements that we have had.”

Coltart said the Bill was so flawed that it had attracted fierce protests from civic society.
“But we have to take it because there is no other non-violent option that was still available,” he said. “Our people are weary, our country is broke.”

Coltart said President Mugabe’s government was playing in the hands of its detractors by continuing to engage in violence against its opponents.

“We should now start using non violent means to resolve our differences,” he said. “Unless we all renounce violence, our nation shall remain a second class nation.”

Because of the flaws that we have experienced in the past, he said, it was easy to understand the skepticism that was emanating from countries such as America, the European Union and other Western countries about prospects of success in the unity government.

“There are many pitfalls that lie ahead. If this is to work, we have to demonstrate utmost good faith,” he said.

Coltart said Zimbabweans needed to work out modalities on how to bring back millions of what he said were brilliant Zimbabweans who have fled this country over the past few years.

He said the scenario of a unity government was not new in Zimbabwe and should not be viewed naively by both politicians and ordinary Zimbabweans.

He said Zimbabwe had been at the stage of a negotiated settlement to her political disputes before and failed to embrace the spirit of change despite the euphoria that characterized the then new dispensation.

“We saw this in the new administration that was formed as a result of the Lancaster House Agreement,” Coltart said.

“The same repressive laws that were used before 1980 to suppress the majority were never removed. The new government never made any effort to repeal those laws.

“The Rhodesian Broadcasting Corporation that was broadcasting partisan information was replaced by the Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation that is doing the same.

“The process of forming a functioning government will not be finished today. A lot of challenges lie ahead. Our vision is to have a tolerant, free, vibrant, multi racial and democratic society in Zimbabwe which will become the jewel of Africa.

“The passing of this Bill makes a significant step towards attaining that dream.”

The Bill, which was voted for by all the 184 lower house parliamentarians and all the 72 senators who attended the two sessions, now awaits assent by Mugabe.

The passing of the Bill seeks to create an executive post for Prime Minister-Designate, Morgan Tsvangirai who shall be the deputy chairperson of cabinet.

The MDC leader shall be deputized by his second in charge, Thokozani Khuphe and Mutambara, leader of the smaller faction of the MDC.

Mugabe, who remains in control of government, will chair the National Security Council and Cabinet, proclaim and terminate martial law and formally appoint his deputies.

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Bill sails through

The Herald
6 February 2009
By Zvamaida Murwira

CONSTITUTION of Zimbabwe Amendment (No. 19) Bill that seeks to give legal effect to the framework of the inclusive Government was unanimously passed by both the House of Assembly and Senate yesterday.

The Assembly passed the Bill with a margin of 184-0 with the Senate giving it the thumbs up 72-0, effectively sealing the second step towards the formation of the inclusive Government following the setting up of the tri-partisan Joint Monitoring and Implementation Committee last week.

The Bill now awaits presidential assent to become law to pave way for the swearing in of the Prime Minister and his deputies, and the appointment of Cabinet next week.

Among the senators who lent their support to the Bill were Vice President Cde Joseph Msika and Zanu-PF national chairman Cde John Nkomo.

Speaking during its second reading stage in both Houses, the Minister of Justice, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs, Senator Patrick Chinamasa, said the presentation of the Bill marked a historic occasion as it sought to usher in an inclusive Government in which all political parties represented in Parlia-ment would participate.

The minister chronicled to both Houses the background to the Bill, which he described as “long and bumpy”.

“It has been a long, frustrating, erratic, bumpy and quarrelsome journey characterised by animosities, disagreements, mutual dislikes, name-calling, demonisations, vilification of each other’s policies and leaderships,” said Sen Chinamasa.

“But notwithstanding these negatives, what is important and significant is that we have managed to reach this far and for that, we forever remain eternally grateful to our people for their resilience, understanding and support.”

He told legislators how engagement of the political parties began after the 2002 presidential elections when Zimbabwe was advised by Sadc and the Commonwealth to begin a process of dialogue to resolve a dispute raised by the MDC against the outcome of the elections.

Negotiations then began under the facilitation of Professor Adebayo Adedeji of Nigeria and Mr Kgalema Motlanthe, current President of South Africa, then secretary-general of the ruling ANC.

During those negotiations, Sen Chinamasa led the Zanu-PF team to the talks while Professor Welshman Ncube was at the helm of the MDC negotiating team before the opposition party split.

Sen Chinamasa said after the passage of the Bill, there would be no governing or opposition party.

The minister outlined the challenges faced during early days and how the present talks got underway in March 2007 after a Sadc Extraordinary Summit in Tanzania mandated the hen South African president Cde Thabo Mbeki to mediate between the Zimbabwean parties.

He said although Zanu-PF unilaterally introduced electoral reforms in Parliament after earlier negotiations failed to secure agreements, it was critical that they were premised on what had been agreed upon by Zanu-PF and the MDC negotiators.

Contributing to the same debate, Harare East Member of the House of Assembly (MDC-T) Mr Tendai Biti said respect, trust, equality and comradeship were the fundamental principles critical for the success of the inclusive Government.

“Each one of us in his conscience and dreams is fully aware of the weight of this occasion. We have travelled this far guided by one thing — faith — and we will have to place faith alone for this experience to succeed.

“Many of us are not sure whether this is right or wrong.

“The question is not whether we are doing the right thing or the wrong thing because that is for history to judge. In my view, the question is do we have any choice, in my respectful view, we do not have,” said Mr Biti.

He said the agreement entered by the three political parties should give people hope.

Khumalo Senator David Coltart (MDC) said the passage of the Bill marked the resolution of the country’s challenges using non-violent means.

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Zimbabwe Senate passes constitutional bill for inclusive government

www.chinaview.cn
2009-02-06

HARARE, Feb. 6 (Xinhua) — Zimbabwe’s senate on Thursday passed Constitutional Amendment Number 19, paving the way for the establishment of an inclusive government.

The bill now awaits the signature of President Robert Mugabe to enact it into law after 72 senators who are in the House voted for its passage with no votes cast against it.

The Lower House earlier on Thursday endorsed the deal which will see the country’s three main political parties form a coalition government, expected to be in place by the end of next week.

President Robert Mugabe will retain the presidency under the power-sharing deal, while Morgan Tsvangirai of the larger formation of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) will be appointed Prime Minister, and Arthur Mutambara of the breakaway MDC will be named deputy prime minister.

The parties will, among other things, also share cabinet posts.

Presenting the Bill in the Senate, Justice Legal and Parliamentary Affairs Minister Patrick Chinamasa said the passage of the deal would be historic as it will usher in a new era in the way Zimbabwe is governed.

A lot of hurdles had been faced and compromises made for the bill to be acceptable to all parties, he said.

“It has been a long, frustrating, erratic, bumpy and quarrelsome journey characterized by animosities, disagreements, mutual dislikes, name calling, mutual demonisations, vilifications of each other’s policies and leadership,” Chinamasa told the Senate.

“But notwithstanding the negatives, what is important and significant is that we have managed to reach this far and for that we remain fore ever grateful to our people and for their resilience, understanding and support,” he said.

Chinamasa gave a brief account of how the negotiations between ruling Zanu-PF and the opposition MDC began as way back as2002 but had met various setbacks until finally an agreement was signed last year.

Following the passage of the Bill, “it was now time for the inclusive government train to leave the station,” he said to applause from senators.

A representative of the Tsvangirai led formation of the MDC, Sekai Holland, chief’s representative Chief Fortune Charumbira as well as David Coltart of the smaller MDC faction told Senate it was vital for all parties to the deal to support it, as it was one instrument which would take the country forward.

Admitting that the bill is imperfect, they all agreed that it is the only viable solution to addressing the seemingly insurmountable challenges Zimbabwe is facing.

“The bill is flawed and has many potential pitfalls but that is inevitable because what we are debating is a product of compromise,” said Coltart. “This process will not work unless we listen to each other.”

The bill has both permanent and temporary amendments of the Zimbabwe Constitution. The temporary amendments will only be in effect for as long as the inclusive government is in place.

Formation of the inclusive government has taken over five months after the initial signing of the agreements as a result of hard-line stances taken by both ruling Zanu PF and the opposition MDC over issues that the latter wanted addressed before joining the envisaged government.

The Tsvangirai-led MDC finally agreed to participate in the government last Friday.

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