Human rights threatened

France 24 TV
Friday 19 December 2008
By ALEX DUVAL SMITH – CAROLINE DUMAY – GRAHAM WALSH (video)

Thirty years since Zimbabwe’s liberation and Robert Mugabe’s regime is still on the same warpath. Today’s enemy is the political opposition, accused of being western puppets. Human rights activists are the regime’s new target.

Senator David Coltart, human rights lawyer declares: “In the last month or so almost 20 people have been abducted and nobody knows who they are.

“We have obtained court judgments compelling the government to release them. They deny they are holding them but we cannot find them and we know they were last seen in the hands of state operatives.”

They fear the latest disappearances are the cynical endgame of a regime seeking to silence those who know too much.

Posted in Press reports | Leave a comment

‘Assassination attempt’ on Mugabe henchman

The Independent
By Daniel Howden, Africa Correspondent
Wednesday, 17 December 2008

The notorious Air Marshal Perence Shiri, who orchestrated the Matabeleland massacres in 1982, is said to have been shot in the arm in an assassination bid.

President Robert Mugabe is planning to declare a state of emergency in Zimbabwe, the opposition said yesterday, after what the government claims was an assassination attempt on the head of the air force.

Perence Shiri, one of Mr Mugabe’s inner circle, was shot in the arm on Saturday, claim state media reports that surfaced yesterday. Attacks of this kind are almost unheard of in Zimbabwe, where the opposition Movement for Democratic Change has insisted on using peaceful means. There has been no independent verification of the shooting.

A day earlier, the Zimbabwe government accused neighbouring Botswana, whose President, Seretse Ian Khama, is among the few African leaders to openly criticise Mr Mugabe, of training rebels to launch a coup attempt. The accusations were strenuously denied, but opposition leaders fear they will be used as justification for another violent crackdown on political opponents.

A senior opposition leader, Tendai Biti, said the ruling party was getting ready to declare a state of emergency as a prelude to outlawing the MDC. “We have no doubt they are going to declare a state of emergency,” he told the Zimbabwean agency, Newsreel.

Air Marshal Shiri was reportedly ambushed on the way to his farm, which was seized from a white farmer in 2000, and is now recovering in a Harare hospital. The Home Affairs Minister, Kembo Mohadi, said this had been an attempt to destabilise the country. “The attack on Air Marshal Shiri appears to be a build-up of terror attacks targeting high-profile persons, government officials, government establishments and public transportation systems,” Mr Mohadi told the state-controlled Herald newspaper. On Monday, the Justice Minister, Patrick Chinamasa, was quoted as saying he had “compelling evidence” that MDC members were being trained in Botswana to fight.

As the tensions rise, the Zimbabwe people are in the grip of what opposition Senator David Coltart has called the “perfect humanitarian storm”. A cholera outbreak has claimed at least 1,000 lives, the UN says, with officials from Zimbabwe’s health ministry privately saying the real figure could be at least five times higher. With the collapse of the health system, Zimbabweans have been flocking across the borders to South Africa, Botswana and Mozambique in desperate search of medical assistance.
Mr Mugabe, 84 and the only leader Zimbabwe has known, claims cholera is being used as a cover for foreign intervention, and one of his ministers accused the UK and US of using “chemical warfare” against the country, already facing civil disaster. The economy has shrunk faster than any peacetime economy in history, leading to unprecedented hyperinflation and the meltdown of all industries. Despite the crises, Mr Mugabe and his ruling Zanu-PF party have refused to honour a power-sharing agreement with the opposition, reluctantly signed after losing elections in March.

The government has consistently accused the opposition of terror attacks but has provided no evidence. Rights groups and journalists, including The Independent, have documented hundreds of cases of torture, coercion, murder and false imprisonment of opponents of the regime. Mr Biti said civil rights activists and MDC members had been abducted and tortured to obtain fake confessions of involvement in training camps in Botswana. The state was preparing to release video footage of these “confessions” to justify a fresh crackdown.

In recent weeks, more than two dozen leading critics of the government have been abducted. Zimbabwe’s own high court has called for Jestina Mukoko, director of the Zimbabwe Peace Project, who was taken from her home in Harare, to be released. Police denied detaining her and claim not to know her whereabouts.

South Africa’s former president, Thabo Mbeki, mediated a power sharing agreement during the summer but Mr Mugabe has ignored the terms and tried to retain all meaningful authority with the ruling party. The political stalemate has dragged on for months and the MDC leader and would-be prime minister Morgan Tsvangirai is being prevented from re-entering the country because the government refuses to renew his passport.

Hopes that Mr Mbeki’s arch-rival and leader of the ANC, Jacob Zuma, would take a harder line on Mr Mugabe have so far been disappointed.

Posted in Press reports | Leave a comment

Zimbabwe’s humanitarian and political crises need urgent international attention

The crisis in Zimbabwe is getting worse every day. The cholera epidemic is spiralling out of control. Lack of food and famine is increasing in the countryside and according to the UN half of the country’s population of 13.5 million people will need to get food imported to be able to survive. Police brutality is yet again an aspect of every day life. State agents have resorted to abducting human rights defenders and political activists.

The former Secretary General of the UN, Kofi Annan, Graca Machel and the former US President Jimmy Carter, were recently denied entry by the Mugabe regime to travel into the country and study the situation. Even though the opposition MDC (Movement for Democratic Change) won a majority of the seats in March 2008, and a transitional power sharing agreement was signed in September, Zimbabwe remains as authoritarian as ever. The political crisis means that the escalating humanitarian crisis will not be addressed urgently. Zimbabwe is on the verge of total collapse and the international community can no longer be a passive bystander. It is time for an international emergency plan for Zimbabwe with a concrete timetable for democracy. The Zimbabwe people have been suffering for far too long.

At the time of writing the mortality rate of cholera is approaching 1000 people and there are more than 13 000 people who have fallen ill, according to WHO (World Health Organization). Medicins sans frontier warn that potentially 1,4 million Zimbabweans are at risk. People suffering from Aids and malnutrition are especially at risk. Due to the collapse of the waterworks system in the capital Harare and in several other parts of the country the epidemic (that has also now spread to South Africa and Botswana) is deteriorating. Inflation is now at an all time high, 231 million per cent and the store shelves are glaring empty. Armed Police have attacked organized doctors and nurses at demonstrations outside the Health Department in Harare. Zimbabwe has fallen politically, humanitarian and financially the last years. Now it is worse than ever.

We call on the Swedish Government to in cooperate with the world community and regional actors, like SADC (Southern African Development Community) and the AU (African Union) to agree on an emergency ten step plan for Zimbabwe:

1) The negotiations between Robert Mugabe’s ZANU-PF and the two formations of the MDC have all but broken down. Pressure must be brought to ensure that the provisions of the September agreement are complied with urgently according to a clear timetable. The September agreement must immediately be implemented and a national democratic government must be installed.

2) SADC and AU must immediately establish observatory groups who can monitor the development from the ground and supervise that the agreement is being followed. In particular SADC should immediately appoint a senior figure to be a full time envoy to Zimbabwe responsible for ensuring that both the letter and spirit of the September agreement.

3) International Human Rights Organizations must immediately be allowed into the country to study the situation.

4) If the agreement is not implemented there should be a newly held election for President in the first part of 2009 held under the auspices of SADC and the UN..

5) An immediate humanitarian UN-assistance operation should be put in place to put a stop to the cholera epidemic.

6) Adequate refugee camps should be established for the Zimbabweans that are escaping to neighboring countries.

7) African Governments through the AU and SADC should assume responsibility for the crisis. More of the neighboring countries must take a stand and end any remaining policy of “quiet diplomacy”.
8) Pending the implantation of the September agreement all humanitarian development cooperation should be distributed by the UN and the civil society. No money should be given to the current government before the September agreement has been implemented properly. Even once a new government has been set up any developmental assistance should only be channelled through the service Ministries, such as Health and Education, controlled by the two formations of the MDC.

9) International financial institutions should prepare crisis and recovery plans to stabilize the Zimbabwean economy.

10) A long-term Marshall fund should be established for Zimbabwe that can be launched the day the transitional government, as envisaged by the September agreement, is sworn in.

Robert Mugabe has delayed a democratic Zimbabwe for 28 years. The international community has an obligation to put an end to this. A timetable and an emergency plan for the future of the country cannot wait.

Birgitta Ohlsson,
Parliamentarian and spokesperson of international affairs for the Liberal Party of Sweden

David Coltart,
Senator for MDC (Movement for Democratic Change), Zimbabwe

17 December 2008

Posted in Articles | Leave a comment

Remaining faithful in a situation of crisis and hopelessness

On Sunday evening the 7th December I spoke at my old church from my University of Cape Town days, Christ Church in Kenilworth, Cape Town, on the topic “Remaining faithful in a situation of crisis and hopelessness”.

I was asked to speak by Christ Church’s Minister-in-charge Duncan McLea in the context of the terrible suffering being endured by so many Zimbabweans at this time. This suffering comes in the wake of what I call the “perfect humanitarian storm” – the unique and unprecedented convergence of Aids, poverty, malnutrition, a regime that doesn’t care and which deliberately underplays the seriousness of the situation, and – now on top of it all – cholera.

What is the role of the church and people of faith in this situation? That is what I sought to address.

The following verses in 1 Corinthians 7:17-24 formed the basis of the sermon:

“Nevertheless, each one of you should retain the place in life that the Lord assigned to him and to which God has called him. This is the rule I lay down in all the churches. Was a man already circumcised when he was called? He should not be circumcised. Circumcision is nothing and uncircumcision is nothing. Keeping God’s commands is what counts. Each one should remain in the situation he was in when God called him. Were you a slave when you were called? Don’t let that trouble you – although if you gain your freedom, do so. For he who was called by the Lord is the Lord’s freedman; similarly, he who was a free man when he was called is Christ’s slave. You were brought at a price; do not become slaves of men. Brothers, each man, as responsible to God should remain in the situation God called him to.”

Christ Church has recorded the sermon which is posted on its web site at the following link:

http://www.christ-church.org.za/sermons/20081207-19h00-David_Coltart-Faith_In_A_Hopeless_Situation-37_minutes.mp3

Senator David Coltart
Bulawayo
11th December 2008

Posted in Biographical | Leave a comment

Join the dance – MDC told

ZimOnline
By Juma Donke
Thursday 11 December 2008

CAPE TOWN – The opposition Movement for Democratic Change has no option but to accept the flawed September 15 power sharing agreement with ZANU PF for it to start reversing the deleterious effects of the humanitarian crisis that is spreading across Zimbabwe.

Political commentator John Makumbe on Tuesday night railed against the MDC leadership for agreeing to the “very bad deal” which essentially hands back all the levers of power to President Robert Mugabe.

However, the agreement was “the only game in town” and the MDC should dust off its best apparel and go to the “dance”.

“This is a bad deal: a very bad deal. I wonder where these guys were when they signed this deal. Perhaps they were in a stinking toilet. But even a stinking toilet stops smelling if you stay in it for a long time,” Makumbe said.

He likened the Zimbabwean agreement to an equally defective Kenyan power-sharing pact hastily cobbled together to end widening civil strife that left an estimated 1 500 people dead. Kenya spiralled into political violence after opposition leader Raila Odinga’s followers suspected fraud during last December’s presidential poll.

Makumbe said: “Like the Kenyan agreement, this deal hands the levers of head of state to the loser. But that doesn’t surprise me because Thabo Mbeki (the facilitator) is not given to achieving much as the ANC realised after Polokwane.”

He was addressing a seminar organised by The Institute for Justice and Reconciliation on the current situation in Zimbabwe in Cape Town.

Makumbe shared the podium with MDC senator David Coltart. Coltart said the MDC should push for speedy resolution of the sticky points that were holding up implementation of the agreement in the hope of unlocking frozen international development aid.

Despite the agreement’s inherent shortcomings, the MDC should not walk away from the negotiations as that would dash the expectations of millions of hungry Zimbabweans whose hopes of survival are pinned on Morgan Tsvangirai assuming the premiership in the proposed Government of National Unity (GNU).

Makumbe, a professor of politics at the University of Zimbabwe, described the deal as “clumsy, with top heavy structures” that gave power to the so-called Council of Ministers to “supervise” the Prime Minister. In a functioning democracy, the prime minister supervises Cabinet ministers.

Additionally, the agreement was bereft of an implementation timeframe, gave too much power to the office of the president, which powers included appointing the prime minister; was silent on the sharing of governors’ posts and crucially, failed to allocate ministries to the feuding political parties.

Said Makumbe: “The President exercises too much executive power, and now is not the time that Robert Mugabe will start being a gentleman. We know Robert Mugabe uses his powers; even that (which) he doesn’t have.”

The shoddiness of the whole deal was typified by the current battle between ZANU PF and the MDC-T for control of the ministry of home affairs.

While ZANU PF has shown willingness to share this portfolio in line with the November 9 SADC Extraordinary Summit resolution which endorsed this idea, the larger faction of the MDC has refused to join government on these terms.

The MDC’s argument is premised on the fact that ZANU PF has allocated itself the ministry of defence and ministry of state security – the other two security ministries in the triumvirate.

Both speakers criticised the SADC for kowtowing to Mugabe and turning a blind eye to his brinkmanship.

Coltart charged that the SADC November 9 Resolution was an “impractical” and “ridiculous decision”.
Makumbe, added that the DNA of liberation parties in southern Africa made them “allergic to handing over power” to people like Morgan Tsvangirai, who have “zero percent liberation credentials”.

This is why they ganged up against Tsvangirai at the November 9 summit. Coltart, however, argued that an MDC takeover of the ministry of homes affairs – which controls the police and the Registrar General’s office – was bound to be meaningless as both Police Commissioner General Augustine Chihuri and Registrar General Tobaiwa Mudede were unlikely to serve an MDC minister in good faith.

“In a crisis, both Mudede and Chihuri will side with ZANU PF because they belong to that party. The MDC will be left high and dry. It’s a nonsense (the agreement),” said Coltart.

The senator for Khumalo, however, encouraged his colleagues in MDC-T to join the GNU and seize the opportunity to outshine ZANU PF in service delivery and to steady the flailing economy.

As Prime Minister and head of the government, Tsvangirai’s office would be the entry point of all development and humanitarian aid destined for Zimbabwe.

This and the fact that MDC would control the Ministries of Finance, Health, and Education which between them control the national budget and gobble up a large chunk of the finances would place the MDC in the driving seat, said the Senator.

He was sceptical about recent calls by the international community for the ouster of Mugabe. “There is no political will in Britain to oust Mugabe and an uprising is unlikely in Zimbabwe.”

In practice, an international humanitarian invasion of Zimbabwe would be stalled by China and Russia which routinely back dictators.

The former Communist states which wield the veto power in the United Nations Security Council, have unfailingly used their political and legal standing to block attempts to slap UN sanctions on Mugabe and members of his inner circle.

Zimbabwe is also unlikely to implode in same manner as Kenya because there was “no pressure cooker effect” in the country.

Young people who are the vanguard of such uprisings, chose to leave the country for either Botswana or South Africa when they reached “the end of the tether”, handing the ascendancy in the political stalemate to ZANU PF and its military generals.

Also, a small “hardcore” in the military which was bankrolling its operations by fleecing the newly discovered diamonds in Chiadzwa, was prepared to reduce Zimbabwe to the same level as fragmented and rudderless Somalia.

The horn of Africa nation imploded after the 1991 ouster of former dictator Siyad Barre. Repeated attempts to repair its democratic institutions and restore it to full statehood have flopped.

“There are more Zimbabwean activists in Hillbrow (Johannesburg). The majority (of people) left (in Zimbabwe) are physically weak and are inclined to queue the whole day to withdraw ZW$500 000 which is only enough to pay for a one-way ride into town,” said Coltart.

Posted in Press reports | Leave a comment

Remaining faithful in a situation of crisis and hopelessness

TRANSCRIPT OF SERMON BY SENATOR DAVID COLTART,
CHRISTCHURCH, KENILWORTH, CAPE TOWN : 7TH DECEMBER 2008

“Nevertheless, each one of you should retain the place in life that the Lord assigned to him and to which God has called him. This is the rule I lay down in all the churches. Was a man already circumcised when he was called? He should not be circumcised. Circumcision is nothing and uncircumcision is nothing. Keeping God’s commands is what counts. Each one should remain in the situation he was in when God called him. Were you a slave when you were called? Don’t let that trouble you – although if you gain your freedom, do so. For he who was called by the Lord is the Lord’s freedman; similarly, he who was a free man when he was called is Christ’s slave. You were brought at a price; do not become slaves of men. Brothers, each man, as responsible to God should remain in the situation God called him to.”
1 Corinthians 7:17-24

Good evening, everyone. It’s wonderful to be here. It’s a special delight for me because Christchurch holds a special place in my heart. I became a Christian at UCT in June, 1981, and that itself, as I think with many of our conversions, was a miracle because, let me tell you, there is no one more arrogant than a fourth-year Law student! And it took the dogged determination of three young men, two of whom came from this church- one of them is sitting right there this evening – Barry Jessop – it was their dogged determination which the Lord used to reach out to me, and to bring me to faith.

And it was after my conversion that I was privileged to fall under the teaching of David Cook. I found so many of his sermons enriching, but one in particular stands out. He was preaching from Matthew 5, verses 13 and 14. “You are the salt, you are the light of the world”. And that sermon had a profound impact on me; and when Jenny, my wife, and I graduated from UCT we believed that the Lord wanted us to remain in the nation of our birth, to be ‘salt and light’ in Zimbabwe.

And let me tell you that many of our friends and family at the time, thought that we were mad. Both sets of parents, both Jenny’s folks from Fishhoek and mine, from the Eastern Cape, had left Zimbabwe, had emigrated from Zimbabwe in 1980. They had seen the advent of Robert Mugabe’s rule, they had seen that ‘the writing was on the wall’, and they decided to leave; and I think they hoped that we wouldn’t return home.

But as I say, we felt this very distinct call on our lives, and so we started married life together in February 1983, and those of you who know your history of Zimbabwe will know that January and February 1983 were the months when Robert Mugabe deployed his North Korean-trained Fifth Brigade into Matabeleland – into the South-West of the country, where we started our marriage. Indeed, we went into the very vortex of the Gukurahundi, the genocide committed against the Ndebele people by Mugabe’s Five Brigade. We’ve now been in Zimbabwe over 25 years, and as you’ve read in your papers even this morning, it is worse than ever. We are afflicted by hyperinflation. Thirteen noughts have been taken off our currency. When I left Zimbabwe last Thursday, the Rand was trading to the Zimbabwe dollar at 100 BILLION dollars to one, and bear in mind that that hundred billion is with the thirteen noughts taken off! So it comes to a figure that is quite beyond my comprehension.

We’ve seen the collapse of our health and education systems. Indeed, in meetings that I’ve addressed recently, I described it as “a perfect humanitarian storm”. You might have seen that movie “The Perfect Storm”, where you get this convergence of meteorological factors creating a storm which is unprecedented in its power and velocity. Well, in Zimbabwe we now have this perfect humanitarian storm. We have the unique and unprecedented convergence of AIDS, of poverty, of malnutrition, of a Government which deliberately keeps the true knowledge of this to itself; and finally, now, on top of everything else: cholera.

A perfect humanitarian storm…causing unbelievable suffering that is hard for South Africans to fully appreciate. In that context, I was elected to Parliament eight years ago. I was elected on a promise that I, that the party I represented, would deliver democratic change. The party I represent is called the Movement for Democratic Change. But as we all know, Zimbabwe is now more undemocratic than ever.

We live, in short, in a country where there is an extreme crisis and where there is an extreme sense of hopelessness. The conventional worldly wisdom, no doubt, is that any person who finds himself in that situation should get out of it as quickly as possible! The challenge though, for Christians, and that’s the challenge that I want to address this evening, is: how, as a Christian, do we offer hope in such a situation? What is our role, as a Christian, in a country that suffers from this extreme crisis, this extreme sense of hopelessness? And it’s in that context that these verses read out this evening by Jeremy, have been of such great comfort to me; and I think, provide us all – not just those of us who live in Zimbabwe – but all of us who face trials and crises in our lives. We find, I think, profound teaching in them.

There are two broad lessons that we learn from these verses found in 1 Corinthians 7. The first is what I term ‘the general rule’. The general rule, in a crisis, is that Christians should ‘stay put’. Note the theme that goes through these verses. Verse 17: “Each one should retain the place in life that the Lord assigned him, and to which God called him”. Verse 20: “Each one should remain in the situation which he was in, when God called him”. And Verse 24 repeats exactly the same: “Each man should remain in the situation God called him to”.

Now we need to understand what those phrases mean. What does “place in life” mean in this context? What does “a situation” mean? Obviously, from the broader context of these verses, this refers primarily to one’s status or position in society rather than one’s physical location. The context of this passage is relevant. If we read the earlier verses, Paul speaks of a woman staying in a marriage with an unbeliever; and, of course, in the verses read out to us, Paul refers to slaves and says to slaves, “Stay as slaves” – so it is more about a person’s position and status than physical location.

We have, of course, the reminder of the Great Commission in Matthew 28:19: “Therefore, go and make disciples of all nations”. That is an instruction that Christians don’t have to necessarily remain in the physical location they find themselves in, but they have to go out and evangelise the world. And of course, as we know, Paul himself was a real gallivanter, he travelled widely. So clearly, this is not an instruction that all Zimbabweans or all South Africans are to stay in Zimbabwe or South Africa simply because they were born there. Our ‘place in life’, our ‘situation’, means more the environment that God has placed us in.

And so, what is that environment? What has God given us, as Zimbabweans or as South Africans? Well, let me take you through a few things. He has blessed each one of us with
a ‘mother tongue’, a language that we know intimately. He’s blessed all of us with a history. All of you here this evening as South Africans have a common history, a common experience of life. You have been through apartheid together; you have been through the fear of the 1980’s and the great joys of the 1990’s, you have shared that together. And the same for us, as Zimbabweans. The Lord has blessed us with a knowledge of South African culture, and the customs, and your humour – your wonderful, hilarious advertisements! And of course, the Lord has blessed us with our friends, those deep rooted relationships that we have…and our family, both our blood family, and our church family. What we need to understand is that the Lord has given us all these blessings, given us all these gifts, for a purpose. Our parents, our friends, our church brothers and sisters are not given to us by the Lord randomly…God has given all of these blessings to us for use in achieving His glory, His purposes, for extending His Kingdom here in Cape Town, here in South Africa, here in Zimbabwe.

And I think, what comes through this as we consider it in the context of the Great Commission, which is evangelism…is that evangelism is difficult enough without the added barriers of language and culture, those differences in culture. Evangelism is far difficult enough as it is, and the Lord gives us all these other blessings of this common knowledge, to work effectively in that most important task that we have as Christians. And it is for that reason that we should rather remain where we are…remain in a marriage that we find ourselves in, even to an unbeliever, so that we can be a blessing to our husband, we can be a blessing to our children.

But also, that is why we are to remain in a community we know, because that is where we can be the most effective. In other words, what I’m saying is that our default position as Christians is to remain in the country that we know, where we have ties, irrespective of what happens in that country, for better or for worse, on sunny days and rainy days. Now I stress that this isn’t an absolute rule. Paul says in Verse 21 to slaves, “If you can gain your freedom, do so”. The Lord Jesus himself, facing an unjust trial, facing his crucifixion, asks God (recorded in Matthew 26): “My Father, if it is possible may this cup be taken from me”. So those verses indicate that it’s not an absolute rule. Yes, we can be called out of a stressful situation – but the default, the natural position is what Paul says – he would rather that we remain in the situation we find ourselves.

The danger, though, is that it is easy to accept that teaching when things are smooth in a country, when things are smooth in our marriage. The danger comes when we face either personal or national crises, and many of us assume that because we come under great trial, that that is the Lord’s signal that we are to move out of that situation, that we are to avoid that trial, that time of trouble by leaving it. And the Church, not just in Zimbabwe but the world over, is sometimes culpable. The “health, wealth and prosperity” teaching that pervades so much of Christianity these days misleads Christians into thinking that the Christian walk should be easy. But in truth, every Church in fact should have a warning outside of it, and that warning is: Beware! If you come into this body, if you adopt this faith, you’re going to have trouble!

Trials, and troubles, and tribulations are part and parcel of a Christian walk. As we know in James 1, it says “Consider it pure joy…whenever you face trials”. Whenever! They will come, they go with the territory. The point I’m simply making is that trials and difficulties are not good enough reasons for Christians to move out of a situation. They’re not good enough reasons for any Christian to leave Zimbabwe at the present time – in isolation. And certainly, exactly the same applies to South Africa and South Africans.

I find that it is often when Christians fear that there is going to be a drop in their standard of living; or perhaps white Christians fear that their children might lose their sense of identity because they go into a classroom where they are suddenly a minority, that they begin to make these decisions to move. We’ve seen it in Zimbabwe. I suspect that in South Africa, perhaps even in this congregation, in the last few years many Christians have chosen to emigrate because of the crime rate, because of BEE, because of the difficulties of working in a multicultural, multiracial environment…because perhaps of the fear that South Africa may go the same way that Zimbabwe has.

Let me reiterate: it isn’t a sin to emigrate! Some people have no choice. For some people, and I see it in Zimbabwe, it is the only responsible thing for a person to do, if they want to save their lives and look after their children. But we cannot avoid Christ’s concluding remark when he was pleading with the Lord to take ‘this cup’ away from him. He goes on to say: “But Lord, yet not as I will, but as You will”. In other words, when we face these trials in nations, unless the Lord very clearly calls us out of that situation; unless he demonstrates that his will is something different than that ‘default’, we are to remain put.

Now, this perhaps sounds all very grim. Are we just required by God to rough it out, to live our lives through sheer grit, through grim determination? No, of course not. We don’t serve a cruel God. If we read on in James, it says that trials are there for our benefit. We become better people, we become people who persevere; we are refined through trials. And let me say this to you – lest you pity Jenny and I, and our family. Our experience of living through these trials in Zimbabwe over the last twenty-five years, and especially the trials of the last eight years, is that we’ve been blessed abundantly – to the extent of our cup flowing over. Although we’ve lost the security of pensions and a nice medical aid scheme, and a police force that actually fights criminals…we’ve actually learned so many other things, and through that we’ve been blessed.

We have been challenged, more than anything else, about where we place our trust. Do we place our trust in our medical aid company, do we place our trust in our insurance companies, or do we place our trust in the sovereign Lord? And through that we’ve been – as I say – wonderfully blessed. Through that we have developed a new perspective on the meaning of friendship and family. Most importantly, we have been challenged as deeply privileged people, as we are, about the profound humility, the profound wisdom that we find in poor people who live all around us, how much they can teach us through their humility.

And so, this is this first lesson that we learn: that the general rule in a crisis such as Zimbabwe, is that Christians are to remain in the situation, and face those trials unless the Lord calls us out clearly.

Secondly…the second general rule that we learn is that when we become Christians, we lose the right to respond to any crisis as individuals. In Verse 22 we read: “For he who was a slave when he was called by the Lord is the Lord’s freedman; similarly he who was a free man when he was called, is Christ’s slave”. You were bought at a price – and Ephesians 6 reiterates that, it talks of us being “slaves of Christ”. What this means, is that when we come to faith in Christ, we forfeit the right – especially in times of struggle, of stress – we forfeit the right to respond to that situation individually. I stress that that applies in bad times, but of course it applies in good times. Because we were bought at a price, because we’ve become Christ’s slaves, we are subject to the Master’s bidding, not our own will.

Tied into that, is the notion that when we become Christians, we become part of a ‘body’ of slaves, a plantation community if you like! In 1 Corinthians 12:24 we read: “God has combined the members of the body so that there should be no division in the body, but that its parts should have equal concern for each other. If one part suffers, every part suffers with it. If one part is honoured, every part rejoices with it”. And in 1 Corinthians 12:27 we read, “You are the body of Christ, and each one of you” – each one of you, each one of us – “is a part of that body”.

One of the major problems of our Western culture, of our civilisation, is that we have all become so focused on the individual, on the nuclear family, on this materialistic world, on what is best in our interests – and in that, we have forgotten about the community. The wider community, but also the community constituted by a church like this. I’ve seen it in Zimbabwe and I know it in my own life, that we are all guilty of making decisions by ourselves when we face crises; and those decisions are generally governed by the notion of what is good for us. In other words, we make many decisions in response to a crisis, without regard for the wider Body of Christ; and what has happened in Zimbabwe in this regard in the last eight years, is shocking and instructive at the same time – and I suspect the same applies in South Africa.

In general, in Zimbabwe, it has been the strong in society, the leaders – including pastors, the young people, the educated, the employed, the mobile who have left the country, and have left behind the weak, the widows, the orphans, the homeless, the grandmothers. Many of the ‘shepherds’ have left. In this regard I have a lovely joke that a good friend of mine (Martin Morrison, some of you may know him – he was one of my mentors at University) likes to tell. He often jokes about the difference between getting a call to pastor a church in Hillbrow, and Hermanus. And he says that if you’re in a church in Hermanus, and you get a call to move to a church in Hillbrow, you respond by saying “thank you very much for the call, I will pray about it and let you know”. And if you’re in a church in Hillbrow and you get a call to pastor a church in Hermanus, you go to Hermanus, and pray about it once you’ve got there!

I think that that, sadly, is what has happened in Zimbabwe. Many shepherds have left, at the very time the grazing fields are ablaze, where the sheep, where the flocks are distraught and confused, the shepherds have left. And they’ve left their flocks behind – terrified, leaderless, and threatened. And the same has happened in families. The young have left, leaving behind the old and the infirm. I think that the lesson in this is that if we are indeed slaves in Christ, we no longer have the luxury of making decisions ourselves, without regard to the wider community. Indeed – and I speak to the leaders in this church and in the wider society – leaders have a special responsibility imposed on them. The strong have a special responsibility imposed on them, to remain in a crisis situation.

I must admit, as I journey to South Africa, as I listen to the debates taking place in South Africa, I am concerned by some of the things I see, especially in the White community. It seems to me that what happened in Zimbabwe in the last ten to fifteen years is in many respects happening in South Africa; where the more mobile members of your community, those with wealth, those with good educational qualifications, are emigrating to the safe havens of Australia and New Zealand; and that includes, sadly, many Christians. It shouldn’t surprise us when people who do not have a faith in God make decisions like that, but I think that as Christians we need to be deeply challenged if, when we have this apparent faith in God, it is us who are making the decisions to place our faith not so much in God and his plan for us in this nation, but in a foreign Government.

And so, I want to leave a challenge to all of you here this evening: those of you who are unsettled by the prospect of Jacob Zuma coming to power, who are unsettled by the financial crisis, who are unsettled by crime in this country and the inability of the Government to tackle it, who are considering whether you should perhaps not move to safer shores: we need to be challenged on what we are placing our faith in. But it needs to go further than that. We need to be challenged about the role that the Lord has for each one of us, not just in South Africa but in Southern Africa. And we need to be challenged about the ripple effect that inevitably occurs when young, strong people leave a community like this; the ripple effect which undermines the capacity of those left behind.

But my purpose this evening is not to leave you crestfallen and gloomy and depressed! I want to encourage you, in closing. Because in challenging each other we also need to encourage people, all of us, as we face the trials and the uncertainties of living on this exciting continent, Africa. The instruction for us to remain in this situation, to face up to these challenges, is not a blind, callous instruction given by a merciless God who lacks compassion. Rather, this instruction needs to be seen in the following positive light. I’ll leave you with six areas of encouragement.

Firstly, the Lord that we serve is Sovereign. He was in control yesterday, he has been in control of our entire lives up to this point, and he is a consistent God – he will be in control tomorrow. He IS in control of South Africa; He IS in control of Zimbabwe. He understands what is going on in Zimbabwe – he is a sovereign God.

Secondly, Scriptures teach – and let me tell you from personal experience…this is true… that God has a perfect plan for each one of us as individuals, AND a perfect plan for our nations. Where we get it wrong, often, is that we don’t understand God’s timing. But if we look at Scripture and if we look at history, we will see that God has a perfect plan. I leave you with two of my favourite Psalms – Psalm 7 and Psalm 37. Zimbabweans who know me very well, know that I often turn to these verses! Psalm 7 talks about us not being surprised about evil men. They will dig holes for other people to fall into, but the promise is that they fall into those holes themselves. And of course Psalm 37 is the Psalm that says, “Don’t fret…don’t fret when you see evil men apparently getting away with their wicked schemes. The time will come, and the time will come shortly, when you look about, and you won’t see those people any longer.” And history shows that those Psalms written thousands of years ago are true. They applied to Nazi Germany, they applied to the fascists in Serbia, and they apply to Zimbabwe. They are our promise!

Thirdly, both Scripture and historical experience show that it is in times of crisis and seemingly hopeless situation, that God uses that. The best example of that is the Cross. Can you imagine the disciples, standing at the foot of the Cross, thinking that this was the worst day of their lives? That everything that they’d worked towards was just being destroyed before their very eyes? And yet, as we know, it was in that seemingly hopeless situation, that extreme crisis, that God actually worked his most powerful miracle – for us, here, today.

Fourthly, both Scripture and historical experience show that God uses the small, the weak, the powerless in any society to achieve His purposes. I’ve just read a truly magnificent book this year by an American called Jim Wallis called “Reviving Faith and Politics” (http://www.amazon.com/Great-Awakening-Reviving-Politics-Post-Religious/dp/0060558296), and he makes this comment in it. He says, “Majorities normally don’t change things”. Majorities? I’ve got that right! Majorities don’t normally change things. Creative minorities do, and the majorities normally go along in the end. He quotes from an anthropologist, Margaret Meade, who once wrote: “Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has”. And that is true. It is the weak, it is the small people that the Lord uses to overcome the massive obstacles that seem insurmountable.

Fifthly, God is a personal God. He’s called each one of us into that role of that wonderful sermon that David Cook gave me so many years ago – that role that each of us have, of being ‘salt and light’ in our societies. And what we know about ‘salt and light’ is that salt is more effective, the more corrupt a society becomes; and the darker a society is, the brighter light shines. And that is our role. Our role in societies which appear to be becoming more and more corrupt, and dark, and devious are precisely the societies that we, as Christians, are called into.

Sixthly, and finally…that calling, for each one of us, comes with a promise. One of my favourite verses is found in Philippians 4. It says: “Rejoice! Don’t be anxious about anything, bring your troubles to the Lord”. And then a promise follows: it says that the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus. Let me tell you in closing that, for all the chaos in Zimbabwe, Jenny and I and my family know that peace. It is a reality in our lives. It is a promise that we have found to be true; and it is a promise for each one of us here. Amen!

Posted in Speeches | Leave a comment

Zimbabwe’s police and army clash in Harare

The Telegraph
By Sebastien Berger and Peta Thornycroft in Harare
1 December 2008

Police shot at rioting soldiers on the streets of Harare on Monday as unpaid
uniformed personnel sided with the country’s impoverished people for the
first time in protest against Zimbabwe’s collapsing economy.

Tensions boiled over when around 50 troops were denied money from banks,
after queuing all day.

The soldiers, from Cranborne Barracks and wearing camouflage dress, staged
an impromptu protest, shouting at the banks, and were joined by hundreds of
civilians at the corner of Robert Mugabe and Fourth Streets, in the heart of
the capital.

When heavily armed riot police, in full combat dress, arrived to break up
the demonstration, violence broke out – and the soldiers fought back.

“The pot is now boiling,” said an eyewitness. “We have never seen anything
like this before, soldiers and ordinary people standing side by side and
fighting the police.”

As a wounded soldier was being loaded in a police lorry, two generals from
defence headquarters, near Robert Mugabe’s official residence, arrived, and
their presence appeared to intimidate the rioters, who began to disperse.

But the clash – which came after several soldiers were arrested last week
following an attack on money changers – is a graphic illustration of the
risk the dysfunctional economy poses to the regime.

If Mr Mugabe is unable to maintain loyalty even within his own armed
services, his position will come under serious threat.

As the country’s economic crisis spiralled out of control, a government
decision to cut the water supply to large swathes of Harare threatened to
spread the cholera epidemic.

The official newspaper claimed that the water was cut off because of a
shortage of an essential chemical used during the purification process, but
the move raised concerns that it would spread the deadly epidemic that has
seen more than 11,000 cases nationwide. As the water was shut off, families
were forced into the streets, carrying containers and searching for water
from wells or cisterns.

The worsening situation has seen Mr Mugabe’s Zanu-PF make key concessions in
its negotiations over a constitutional amendment with the opposition
Movement for Democratic Change.

According to a copy of the text agreed by negotiators and seen by the
Telegraph, it contains a definition of the phrase “in consultation”, which
appears several times in the power-sharing agreement between the parties,
that will give the Prime Minister-designate Morgan Tsvangirai a veto over
key government decisions, including the appointment of senior personnel,
among them the country’s service chiefs.

“These provisions and the definitions attached to them make a dramatic
reduction in Mugabe’s power,” said David Coltart, a lawyer and senator for
the MDC faction led by Arthur Mutambara.

“It’s a huge change. It gives Morgan substantial power and certainly
sufficient power to go ahead with this agreement.

“What’s driving all of this now is just complete economic collapse and the
growing humanitarian crisis which Zanu realise they have no answer to. There’s
an air of desperation now.”

Posted in Press reports | 1 Comment

Constitutional Amendment Now Focus In Zimbabwe Power-Sharing Saga

VOA
By Blessing Zulu
Washington
18 November 2008

Zimbabwe’s troubled power-sharing process involving the long-ruling ZANU-PF and the majority Movement for Democratic Change focused Tuesday on the constitutional amendment required to establish the office of prime minister to lead a national unity government.

Sources in both parties indicated competing drafts of such an amendment were being drafted by the MDC formation headed by prime minister-designate Morgan Tsvangirai and President Robert Mugabe’s Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front, in power since 1980.

Political sources said the parties will send their versions of the amendment to power-sharing mediator Thabo Mbeki, the former South African president, and to the Southern African Development Community and African Union.

ZANU-PF, Tsvangirai’s MDC formation and the rival MDC wing led by Arthur Mutambara have been deadlocked for weeks over the allocation of ministries in the proposed government, raising doubts about the power-sharing as enshrined in a Sept. 15 agreement.

A Southern African Development Community summit Nov. 9 proposed as a compromise that ZANU-PF and the MDC share control of the Ministry of Home Affairs, which has authority over the Zimbabwe Republic Police, but Tsvangirai’s MDC has dismissed this as unworkable.

The Tsvangirai MDC has also insisted that the constitutional amendment needed to create the offices of prime minister and deputy prime minister be passed by parliament and signed into law before the unity government be formed. The SADC leaders had recommended that the government of national unity be formed without awaiting such an amendment.

ZANU-PF has warned that President Mugabe will move ahead to name a cabinet and form a government without Tsvangirai if agreement cannot be reached, while Tsvangirai for his part has warned that such a move would spell an end to the power-sharing process.

Currently pursuing a diplomatic initiative in Europe, Tsvangirai was quoted by AFP as saying the MDC would use its parliamentary majority to nullify a unilaterally named cabinet.

Information Minister Sikhanyiso Ndlovu told Blessing Zulu of VOA’s Studio 7 for Zimbabwe that a new cabinet must be named before the amendment goes to parliament.

Spokesman Nelson Chamisa of the Tsvangirai MDC formation responded that to the contrary, the amendment must be put in place before the cabinet can be appointed.

Legal Secretary David Coltart of the MDC wing led by deputy prime minister-designate Arthur Mutambara said his formation will refrain from proposing a draft to minimize confusion.

Posted in Blog | Leave a comment

The Long and Winding Road: Towards a free and fair electoral system

Speech given by Senator David Coltart
Law Society Summer School: Troutbeck
14th November 2008

I am grateful to Beatrice Mtetwa, President of the Law Society, for giving me a blank cheque today to speak about our electoral system.

You may say that this is useless, since cheques are all but worthless in Zimbabwe at the moment. Nevertheless, I will seize the opportunity to dream a bit with you today – to speak about some of the measures we still need, in my view, to ensure that the citizens of Zimbabwe are able to elect the people they believe are best suited and qualified to run the country.

As we discussed this morning, the last eight years presents a very sorry picture of our electoral environment.

Between 2000 and 2006, as Legal Secretary of the MDC, I was responsible for bringing all the electoral cases during that period. I brought some 38 challenges to the 2000 Parliamentary election. I brought Morgan Tsvangirai’s challenge to the March 2002 Presidential election. Yet, records show that by the 2005 Parliamentary election, not a single case had concluded with the overturn of a result. By the time of the 2008 Presidential election, Morgan Tsvangirai’s case was also not concluded. The same applies to the 2005 Parliamentary election – electoral cases were brought but not a single one was successful. These farcical delays and other issues have brought the entire electoral and judicial system into disrepute.

There are two lessons to be learnt from this.

First, in the overwhelming majority of cases, the complaint of the losing candidate had little to do with the electoral law per se. The problem was violence and the State’s unwillingness to deal with it. In other words, it doesn’t matter how good one’s electoral laws and systems are if violence is allowed to pervade the atmosphere, the process will not be free and fair and the will of the electorate will be subverted.

Second, much depends on the quality and independence of the judges rather than the electoral law. Several of the 2000 cases were fought in the High Court. Several of these cases resulted in fine judgements. However, when appeals were lodged by the losing Zanu PF defendants, the Supreme Court’s delay in setting the matters down and shocking dereliction of duty meant that these cases were never finalised. In the 2005 case, Mangoma v Mutasa, Justice Makarau handed down an excellent judgment, finding that food had been used as a weapon. However, she was then constrained by a serious flaw in the electoral system which required her to establish its material effect on the election which the learned Judge felt she could not do.

The point is that much depends on the quality of the judges. Research has shown that too much plasma TV affects one’s judgment. If the Courts are to play a meaningful role in the future, there will be a need to reform the judiciary to ensure that our benches are occupied by professional, independent and competent judges rather than politicians. In other words, it doesn’t matter how good one’s electoral laws and systems are, if they are not adjudicated upon by an independent judiciary.

In this situation, those laws simply provide a smokescreen of fairness which hides the harsh reality. This is illustrated by the changes to the law since 2000. There have been obvious improvements to our electoral laws since 2000. We have seen the introduction of translucent boxes; voting on one day; counting of votes at the polling station; posting of results outside the polling station and a minimum period of six months within which to hear cases.

These have all helped. However, as shown in June 2008, it is all absolutely worthless in the face of massive violence and a biased Electoral Commission.

We need a sea change in an approach to determining who is entitled to vote. The liberation cry of “one man (person), one vote” has been totally undermined by ZANU PF’s exclusive policy on voter registration. We need to change from an exclusive to an inclusive policy.

An exclusive policy does everything to exclude people from being on the voter’s roll. For example, one has to apply to go on; one has to prove residence by providing letters from chiefs etc; vast powers given to Electoral officials to arbitrarily remove one from the voter’s roll; there are very exclusive and restrictive citizenship laws.

In other words, the entire system is designed to make it difficult to register and
difficult to vote – this is the negation of the principle of “one person, one vote”.

What must be done to reform our Electoral legislation?

1. We need a change in citizenship provisions. Both present laws and those envisaged in the so-called Kariba Constitution (agreed to in September 2007 by the Zanu PF and MDC negotiators) are very restrictive. In essence, we need to respect a fundamental birth right – if one is born in Zimbabwe and at least one parent was lawfully resident in Zimbabwe at the time of birth, then one should be entitled to become a citizen.

We also need to take into account the deleterious consequences of both the liberation war and the events of the last eight years. If one was born outside Zimbabwe to at least one parent who was forced to live outside the country because of political circumstances, he or she ought to be entitled to citizenship by descent.

In other words, we must open up the number of people eligible to become citizens.

2. We must change registration procedures. Mudede boasts about his computerised registration system of births and deaths. He is correct in one sense; it is potentially a very good system. However, it has been subverted. We need to change the laws to ensure that every person who is born in Zimbabwe or who acquires citizenship either through registration or descent will automatically be placed on the voter’s roll upon reaching 18. In other words, one will not need to apply to be registered, it will be done automatically.

To ensure that a person’s address can be included for delimitation purposes, we should create an obligation on schools to submit address details to the Registrar General’s office of every child who turns sixteen. In the absence of this, we could us the address of birth as a default address solely to determine which constituency a person will be registered in.

We could also shift the onus for removal. If the Registrar General or anyone else wants to remove a person from the voters’ roll, the onus should be on the Registrar General to bring an application to the High Court, including personal service on the specific individual, to remove that person. The State must also fund the legal expenses of the Respondent to ensure that people are given every chance to remain on the voters’ roll.

3. We need to create a genuinely independent Electoral Commission. For all the claims that the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission is independent, the objective evidence shows that it is not. Until there is a genuinely neutral procedure regarding selection, it will remain a biased body. However, we do not wish to replicate Tsvangirai’s definition of an independent commission.

Instead, we need an expanded selection committee which will include political parties, churches, civic organisations and to create a “long list” from these areas. The constitution should proscribe minimum qualifications including gender, integrity, objectivity (not held office) and maturity. Those initially selected should be put before a public, televised hearing before a Senatorial select committee. Those approved by Senate should be presented to the President for selection from a “short list”. The President should then select a prescribed number from the “short list”.

4. We must prohibit the use of State resources in an election campaign. For example, the use of helicopters, ZRP, ZESA, police etc.

5. We must have mandatory public debates for the Presidential election.

6. Finally, there must be a zero-tolerance approach to violence. Violence and the threat of violence has been the single reason why our elections have not been free and fair for the past several decades. Until we totally snuff it out, it will continue to raise its ugly head. We need a specific provision in our law which will state that the moment any violence or threat of violence is established objectively by a court at any stage of the electoral process by any person, that this will void the election.

Some will argue that this is an impossible standard, but it is not. Why should Africa have a different standard to the rest of the world? Finnish elections in 2007 were obviously peaceful, as was the recent election of Barack Obama. It is possible.

We have a severe illness in our country. Our nation needs peculiar and harsh medicine to cure itself from the disease. Until we take this step and move from paying mere lip service to the principle of non-violence, we will never ensure that the citizens of Zimbabwe are able to choose the people they believe are best suited to run the country.

The Law Society has a major role to play. We have a unique opportunity to argue that these principles be part of the Constitutional reform process envisaged over the next 18 months in terms of the 15th September 2008 agreement.

Posted in Speeches | Leave a comment

Robert Mugabe to form government ‘as soon as possible’

The Telegraph
By Sebastien Berger And Peta Thornycroft in Johannesburg
10 November 2008

The opposition Movement for Democratic Change had been demanding control of the home affairs ministry, but a Southern African Development Community (SADC) summit in Johannesburg at the weekend said the post should be shared.

“We will try to institute it as soon as possible,” said the octogenarian leader, who has presided over the destruction of the economy of his country, where millions of people need food aid.

The MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai will be invited to submit names for inclusion in the cabinet, added Zanu-PF’s chief negotiator Patrick Chinamasa. “Whether he will respond positively or not only time will tell,” he said.

The opposition is now faced with a stark choice, either walking away from the agreement signed in September – which it has previously said it would not do – or give in, and join a government in which it would clearly be the junior partner.

It is yet another negotiating coup for Mr Mugabe, who has demonstrated his ability to out-manoeuvre opponents time and again over the decades.

The MDC spokesman Nelson Chamisa said: “Our position as of now is that a false settlement is riskier than no settlement,” adding that the party leadership would meet on Friday to consider developments and decide on “the future of the dialogue process”.

David Coltart, an MDC Senator, added: “This is highly unsatisfactory. For me it is not so much how the cake cuts but how it is eaten. Everything in Zimbabwe is disastrous.”

Britain condemned the summit’s conclusions, with Gordon Brown’s official spokesman saying: “The international community is quite clear that it expects an equitable agreement on the allocation of ministries between Zanu-PF and the MDC.”

But signs of fatigue over the issue are beginning to emerge among the SADC leaders – only five of the organisation’s 15 members were represented at the head of state level at the summit, with the MDC’s biggest supporters, Botswana and Tanzania, only sending their vice- president and foreign minister respectively.

Sources said that the MDC had lost sympathy within the gathering when it sought to re-open all ministerial allocations, having previously said that home affairs was the key sticking point.

Meanwhile. the Global Fund to fight Malaria, Aids and Tuberculosis yesterday announced that it had approved grants for programmes in Zimbabwe totalling $169m (£107m) over two years.

After a dispute over its money being made available to recipients, with the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe holding on to millions of pounds’ worth of foreign exchange for several months, the fund said it would delay putting the grants into effect “until it has agreement on a way of channelling cash that will not enable any interference by the government at all”.

“This may prove difficult in the current political environment,” said its spokesman Jon Liden, “so nobody should hold their breath about when these grants become active”.

Posted in Blog | Leave a comment