‘Elections a waste of time’

Newsday

6th July 2017

By Blessed Mhlanga

The government’s failure to implement electoral reforms and create a conducive environment for free, fair and credible elections makes the 2018 polls a futile academic excise, a leading political scientist has said yesterday.

Southern Africa Political and Economic Series director, Ibbo Mandaza told a University of Zimbabwe elections symposium that there was no need for Zimbabweans to be “hauled” through elections because of lack of conditions to have fair polls.

“Electoral malpractices in Zimbabwe legitimise the illegitimate. If we are to have elections, we need to reform State institutions,” he said.

Mandaza, who has been leading calls for a National Transitional Authority, in his presentation, accused State media of being captured, saying it would not be helpful in the polls.

“State media is polarised, it has been taken over by Lacoste. It’s a mess,” he said in reference to a Zanu PF faction reportedly pushing for Vice-President Emmerson Mnangagwa to succeed President Robert Mugabe.

Mandaza’s call comes as the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (Zec) also insisted that Zimbabweans living in the Diaspora and electoral officers would not vote, saying the law only provided for polling station-based voting.

Zec commissioner, Qhubani Moyo insisted that there would be no postal voting and deployment of those on duty on polling day would be determined by voting stations.

“Diaspora voting is limited by the law, which speaks to polling station-based voting. There needs to be review of the law to include the Diaspora,” he said.

However, human rights lawyer and former Education minister, David Coltart dismissed the submission, saying the Constitution was clear on voting rights.

“What a load of nonsense – the Constitution makes it quite clear that all citizens over 18, wherever they live, are entitled to vote,” he shot back.

The Elections Resource Centre was also quick to point out that Moyo was offside in his remarks because the Constitution was clear.

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Driving lessons at primary school

The Standard

By Obey Manayiti

18th June 2017

BLAKISTON Primary School in Harare has started offering driving lessons as the government’s controversial education reforms begin to take root.

The government school in the capital’s Milton Park area notified parents about the new developments through a secular last week.

“Come and register at the school,” read the circular targeting those who want to take provisional and defensive driving oral lessons.

“For those who have registered, you can bring $10 for materials,” the circular added.

The school is also offering cake-making lessons and is considering introducing sewing lessons.

Primary and Secondary Education ministry spokesperson Patrick Zumbo said the lessons at Blakiston were part of the informal education programme introduced by the government.

“We are even encouraging people who are as old as me and who want to join non-formal education to come for such skills training being offered by schools,” he said.

“There is nothing wrong with that practice, in fact, we are even encouraging it.

“These are schools and previously we used to have what we called adult education where people were just being taught how to read and write.

“We have now gone beyond that and these are skills that we can offer to the communities for example metal work, someone might even say let me go and further my skills.”

Zumbo added: “Such people will come in under the non-formal group with their own class full of adult people who are only interested in gaining skills.

“We are encouraging almost all our schools including primary and secondary ones to introduce what we call non-formal education.”

Zumbo said the initiative was a way of giving back to society.

“Schools are there to service their communities and here it’s not only about monetary value,” he said. “We are a service provider and we are providing services to the communities.”

Primary and Secondary Education minister Lazarus Dokora has introduced a number of controversial reforms since he took over from David Coltart in 2013.

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Government feared Coltart would alter history syllabus

NewZimbabwe.com

7th June 2017

FORMER Primary and Secondary Education Minister, David Coltart, says the government prioritises presidential and cabinet foreign trips while routinely allocating meagre budgets to the education sector.

Speaking at the Trust of Schools Zimbabwe Association meeting in Victoria Falls on Monday, Senator Coltart said for the past 25 years, the Zanu PF government has paid lip service to the notion that education is a budgetary priority.

“In government’s own financial statements issued last November, it was shown that last year government spent some $44 million on Presidential and Cabinet travel against less than $400, 000 on educational materials.

In other words, we actually spent, on educational materials, just one percent of the actual amount spent on Presidential and Cabinet travel. That alone displays a serious warped sense of priorities,” said Coltart.

The former minister said during his last month in office less than $50,000 was transferred from treasury to run over 8,000 schools.

“I have no doubt that the situation is even worse now. The attitude towards teachers is also given in the fact that soldiers and policemen were paid their bonuses earlier than teachers. All of this demonstrates a mind-set which does not prioritise education in reality,” Coltart said.

He said the Zimbabwe education sector not only needs major policy shift that goes much deeper than simply improving teachers’ salaries but it also requires a national consensus and that the government should start to invest heavily in that area.

“This major shift must also include a steep increase in the amount of money allocated to building new schools and, critically, the amount we allocate to maintain schools, provide teaching materials and textbooks. The fabric of most government and local council schools is in a shocking state of disrepair,” said Coltart.

Senator Coltart also took a dig at the new curriculum saying he doubted very much if was going to ensure excellence in the education sector.

“Not being an educationist, I have asked educationists who I trust to comment on it and what they have reported back raises major concerns as to the usefulness of this plan as a guideline for education of Zimbabwean children. The issue of “patriotism” is of course problematic-a thin disguise for the ruling party propaganda and brain washing,” he said.

Coltart said he started the process of curriculum reforms as a minister but was frustrated at every turn by Zanu PF operatives.

“There was a particular concern that I would change the history syllabus to make it less partisan. My successor continued the process but of course has enjoyed the full support of senior civil servants, resulting in the new curriculum.”

Coltart was widely credited for restoring a semblance of normalcy in the education sector during the inclusive government.

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“Restoring excellence to Zimbabwe’s education sector” – Opening address by Senator David Coltart at CHIZ 2017 AGM

CHIZ AGM 2017 Pathway to Progress: People, Passion and Purpose

Victoria Falls – 5th June 2017

Opening address by Senator David Coltart

Introduction

I can’t tell you how delighted I am that I’ve been given an opportunity to speak to you today. It is almost 4 years since my office as Minister of Education ended. While I appreciate that many of you must’ve been greatly relieved to see the back of me, I greatly appreciated the opportunity of serving as Minister of Education. My time left me with a new appreciation of the importance of education for all Nations. I was also left with profound respect for our teachers, especially those who toil in poor rural schools and faithfully teach our children, often in exceptionally difficult circumstances.

When I left office I decided that it would be right not to criticise my successor but to get him a chance and to give him the benefit of doubt. I confess though to experiencing a growing sense of anxiety especially in the last year or so and on occasions I have felt compelled to voice my concerns. That said I do not think that this is right forum to personally criticise and I would rather take a leaf out of your theme “Pathway to Progress: People, Passion and Purpose” and rather speak in what I hope is a more constructive tone on what I believe we need to do to restore “excellence to Zimbabwe’s education sector.”

I should stress that using the phrase “restoring excellence” I do not suggest that excellence was achieved during my tenure. In fact I believe that all that was achieved during my tenure was the stabilization of an education sector which was in danger of collapse when I started in 2009. In fact I left the Ministry with an overwhelming sense of work unfinished.

As good as Zimbabwe’s education system has been in the past and still, in many respects, still is, I think that all non partisan educationalists would agree that the sector remains in crisis and much work has still to be done to make our system world class, which should be our aim.

I cannot do justice to the many complex issues facing the education sector in Zimbabwe today and so all I can use this morning is a broad brush to outline four areas which, in my view, need critical attention.

Funding

There is a widely held belief in Zimbabwe, certainly in Government circles, that our spending on education is at the very least adequate and some would argue good. Last week (on the 28th May) Deputy Minister Paul Mavhima was quoted in the Chronicle stating that “government reserves 25 % of its annual budget for Primary and Secondary Education”. There is no doubt that a large portion of what I term our theoretical Budget is allocated to education. By theoretical budget I refer to the Budget announced in parliament by the Minister of Finance. Even during the government of national unity Minister Biti announced in his Budget speeches very generous allocations to the Ministry of Education. However when I was Minister the amount which was actually transferred to the Ministry was a fraction of the amount in the theoretical budget. In fact in my last month in office less than $50,000 was transferred from treasury to run over 8,000 schools. I have no doubt that the situation is even worse now.

The reality is that for at least the last 25 years we have as a Nation merely paid lip service to the notion that education is a budgetary priority. The same applies to all of us, even in the private sector. We all simply do not appreciate what is needed to develop a world class education system – in short it requires a sustained national effort over decades to invest heavily in education. Even if we had actually paid the Ministry of Education the theoretical budgetary amount it would remain grossly insufficient to develop a world class education system.

In this regard it is instructive to consider what other Nations have done in the last 50 years. During this period 3 nations in particular have totally transformed their education systems namely, Finland, Singapore and South Korea. The leading education assessment think tank PISA (Programme for International Student Assessment) consistently put these three countries in the top 10 education countries in the world. They have the following similarities:

for over 40 years all have consistently invested heavily in education irrespective of which party has been in power; in other words there has been a broad national consensus
all have relatively low defence spending and relatively small governments
all have dramatically increased the stature and prestige of the teaching profession.

The last factor is critical. In Singapore teaching is now one of the sought after professions. Education faculties attract the best graduates . The best paid teachers in the world are in Singapore where a 2013 study revealed they earned an average of US$45,755 per year. South Korea was close behind in 3rd place. Finland is no different – in fact in Finland the law requires that teachers have a Master degree. In all these countries the teaching profession has great prestige.

Of course what we also know about these countries is that their economies have boomed during the same period they have invested in education. There are of course other countries such as Switzerland which also spend heavily in education, but I have deliberately focussed on these three because 50 years ago their economies were a similar size or even smaller than Zimbabwe’s.

If we contrast this with Zimbabwe it is clear that although government states that education is a priority in reality it isn’t. In government’s own financial statements issued last November it was shown that last year government spent some $44 million on Presidential and Cabinet travel against less than $400,000 on educational materials – in other words we actually spent on educational materials just 1% of the actual amount spent on Presidential and Cabinet travel. That alone displays a seriously warped sense of priorities. The attitude towards teachers is also given in the fact that soldiers and policemen were paid their bonuses earlier than teachers. All of this demonstrates a mind set which does not prioritize education in reality.

In essence what we need is major shift in policy that goes much deeper than simply improving teacher salaries and when we pay them. We need to build a national consensus that we will start to invest heavily in education. This must of course include progressively increasing the amount we pay teachers but must also include a progressive increase in the qualifications we require teachers to have. It must also include a steep increase in the amount of money allocated to building new schools and, critically, the amount we allocate to maintain schools, provide teaching materials and textbooks. The fabric of most government and local council schools is in a shocking state of disrepair.

The question most people will inevitably raise is where will this money come from? In the long term all depends on a future government’s ability to revive the Zimbabwean economy, which can be the only long term source of increased spending on the education sector. However in the short term, the most important policy change needs to be how we allocate existing finances. I have spoken about Presidential travel – whilst a huge reduction in that regard, and in general spending on the Cabinet, would be helpful, the shift in budgetary allocations needs to go much deeper than that. The major change in my view needs to come in defence and general security spending and in the size of government generally. We have a bloated military and simply do not need an army or airforce the size it is. Indeed many of the military barracks spread around Zimbabwe would make excellent schools and technical colleges.

Of course military spending cannot be reduced overnight because if we retrench thousands of soldiers without enabling them to have an alternative source of income that could result in major security concerns. Accordingly this must be seen as a process which will take at least a decade to effect. Part and parcel national commitment to increase education expenditure must be a commitment to systematically reduce the size of the military but at the same time soldiers due to be retrenched should be trained in other skills and financial assistance should be sourced to enable them to start their own businesses or enjoy a comfortable retirement.

The commitment to spend more on education should not be confined solely to the government of Zimbabwe. Parents must themselves be encouraged to make education more of a priority in both government schools and private schools. Whilst researching education in Singapore I noted that fees for private schools are between $10 k and $15 K per semester, in other words far more than private school fees in Zimbabwe. No doubt salaries are much better in Singapore than they are in Zimbabwe and so the average professional person working in Singapore can more easily afford fees like this, whereas in Zimbabwe the economy is struggling and most people are battling to pay the current level of fees. So I am not advocating a massive increase in private school fees; the point is simply that teachers are respected in Singapore as top professionals entitled to good salaries. Until we all understand that and change our mindset for the future we will never understand what we need to do if we aspire to have a world class education system in Zimbabwe. In essence until we start regarding teachers in Zimbabwe as top professionals in the same way we do Doctors, Engineers and Architects, and dare I say it -Lawyers – we will never reach the high standards achieved in countries like Singapore. This cannot happen overnight; it needs to be a generational project, but it requires a fundamental paradigm shift.

Let me say this as well – this also needs to be a global paradigm shift as well. Until the world starts spending less on defense and more on education, not only will many counties be left with sub standard education systems, but also the world will continue to become more unsafe for all. I have recently been appointed to a new body called the Atlantis Group which comprises some 20 former Ministers of Education, including both Barack Obama and David Cameron’s former Secretaries for Education Arne Duncan and Michael Gove. At our inaugural meeting in Dubai in March I spoke about this topic and pointed out the huge disparity between international spending on defense and education. The international community’s main organization to promote education the world over is the Global Partnership for Education. It is tasked with channelling resources provided by the leading democracies in the world and institutions like the World Bank to developing countries such as Zimbabwe. Its current annual budget is in the region of US$ 3 billion, which perhaps sounds a lot of money, but which pales into into significance when one understands the funding needs across the world, and how much money is spend on defense. Two examples illustrate my point: firstly President Trump recently announced that we proposed to increase the USA’s defense budget by 10% this year – the increase alone is $ 56 billion. Then just last week President Trump announced when he visited Saudi Arabia that the USA was going to sell $110 billion worth of weapons to the Saudis. Just 5 % of that money would almost treble the international spending on education, and would dramatically change educational outcomes for literally millions of children.

I need to emphasise that generally I am skeptical about the benefits of aid – I prefer the mantra “Trade not aid”. But having said that I recognize that most developing countries they simply do not have the resources necessary to invest heavily in the infrastructure needed to develop a world class education, and they need this assistance. And for those who are fixated by security concerns it is a well known facts that the rise in terrorism is rooted in poverty and hopelessness. Even the American military accept that unless coming generations are given a good education and through it hope of a better life, terrorism will continue to fester, no matter how many new nuclear weapons, aircraft carriers are produced. And to bring this debate full circle – the same applies in Zimbabwe. The reality is that we do not have any external threats to our national security; the greatest threat lies within our borders. If we do not give coming generations the best education possible we will breed battalions of young people who will be more tempted into crime and violence. But this will only happen if we have a national change of heart regarding how much we are going to invest in education – and this must involve all parties and all citizens, in all sectors.

2. Autonomy

I am often asked what I did to stabilize the education sector which was in such chaos when I took office and my answer usually is – “well actually not very much”. In truth whatever turn around we managed to achieve was due in large measure to the actions of headmasters and teachers countrywide who simply got on with the job. I am a great believer in delegating authority especially to professionals who have a passion for the calling, and education I found no different. I told my HQ staff that I wanted them to facilitate rather than obstruct and as you all know gave enormous autonomy to all schools, both private and government. My policy to allow incentives to be paid to teachers were rooted in the belief that it is good to involve parents in their children’s education. As I have studied education systems across the world it seems to me that the most effective systems are those where parents are heavily invested in their children’s education.

It is this area which has given me the greatest concern since leaving office because it appears my successor is determined to reverse whatever autonomy I had granted to teachers and parents. This is seen in the termination of incentives and the recent statements about the centralization of funds generated at schools by parents. I believe this is retrogressive step and that future education policy should allow increased autonomy to all schools, both government and private. In broad terms Government’s role should be confined to the construction and maintenance of schools and teacher training colleges, to ensuring that economies of scale are achieved in the production and supply of education materials, and that minimum standards are respected through a national system of evaluation. Beyond that schools should be allowed to function as autonomous units.

In this regard I need to comment on what appears to be a recent trend in some schools where Government appears to be trying to control private schools through the enforcement of SI 78 of 1992 – namely the establishment of SDCs which include a government representative on it. This has gained favor with some parents who are keen to have more say in the running of private schools. There are indeed some who state that parents should have the right to elect the Board of Governors of schools, and I suppose some may interpret my comments regarding autonomy to support their view.

In that regard I would not want my comments regarding autonomy to be misconstrued. When I speak of autonomy, I mean specifically autonomy from government control. This flows from the constitutional rights contained in sections 60(3) and (4) and 75(2) of the Constitution which gives parents and citizens the rights to determine the the moral upbringing of their children, including their education and to establish and run schools, and the rights of religious communities to establish institutions, including schools. In other words parents, citizens in general and religious communities have the right to establish educational institutions which should be unfettered by government controls. In schools established by religious communities this means that the religious communities which started and run schools have the right to run those schools in accordance with their beliefs and parents of children attending those schools have the right to choose whether to submit themselves to that ethos or to move their children to another school. In other words autonomy does not extend to parents having the right to take over the running of schools established by religious communities.

The same applies to secular private schools established by particular language groups or ethnic communities. Whilst those schools cannot be discriminatory in their admission policies, their governing Boards have absolute authority to run those schools. Once again parents attending those schools have a choice either to submit to the ethos of those schools or move their children elsewhere.

As a general comment I think we need too understand the fine balance that can and should be achieved between Trust or Boards of Governors and the parent body. Most trusts are made up of people who are not necessarily parents but people who subscribe to the founding ethos or faith of particular schools and who have a long term vision for the school. Parents by their very nature have enormous energy for their children and for the schools their children attend during the period their children attend those schools. But experience shows that most parents lose interest in the schools their children attend once they leave those schools. In other words there is a delicate balance and mutual understanding which should be achieved between governing Trusts and the parental body. Parental bodies tend to have more short term financial goals in mind which will benefit their own children whereas Trusts tend to take a longer view. Governing Trusts need to tap into the short term energy of parents so that it is fully utilized. But likewise parents need to appreciate that long term goals may sometimes conflict with short term goals of parents. In the short term parents may think it good to put a cap on teachers’ salaries, for example, because of their current financial woes. In the long term that may lead to a loss of quality teachers which undermine schools.

The point I making is that if we seek to achieve excellence in education we need to encourage autonomy but once autonomy has been granted to schools there needs to be a balance. Parents must not view autonomy as license to achieve short terms benefits for themselves and their children which may not be in the long term best interests of particular schools and education in general. Likewise governing Trusts, having been granted the right of autonomy by the Constitution must also achieve a balance and harness the productive energy of each generation of parents, by involving them as much as possible in the running of schools. This balance is critical if we are to achieve excellence in future.

3. Curriculum

There has been much publicity in the last year regarding the new curriculum and there is no doubt that if we are to achieve excellence in education we must get our curriculum right. As good as our curriculum has been in the past the Nzaramazanga Commission identified its major flaw in 1999, namely that it was too academically orientated and weak regarding vocational education. I started the process of curriculum reform as Minister but was frustrated at every turn by ZANU PF operatives who were determined to ensure that the curriculum would not be changed during my tenure. There was a particular concern that I would change the history syllabus to make it less partisan. My successor continued the process but of course has enjoyed the full support of senior civil servants, resulting in the new curriculum. At first glance the new curriculum attempts to address some of the concerns raised by the Nzaramazanga Commission but I do not believe that in its current form it is going to ensure excellence in education.

Not being an educationalist I have asked educationalists who I trust to comment on it and what they have report back raises major concerns as to the usefulness of this plan as a guideline for education of Zimbabwean children.  Just to begin I it makes certain wrong assumptions about children and their conditions of learning.  All children seem to be offered the same programme, whether or not it is relevant to them and whether or not it is possible to provide qualified and capable teachers and the necessary equipment – here I would point specifically to agriculture for all, ICT for all – and of course swimming, and the teaching of foreign languages, like Swahili and Chinese, also fall into this category.

Another general comment, which really is another way of saying part of what I have said above, is that the curriculum is totally unrealistic.  There is no way that any time in the near future Zimbabwe can produce teachers that can teach such a syllabus.  When a syllabus is unrealistic it allows teachers to disregard everything and do more or less what they feel comfortable with.  It promotes a gap between ideas and what happens on the ground which is in the final analysis quite dangerous.  Once again, schooling and reality are divorced – with ironically was one of the major criticisms of colonial education.

The issue of “patriotism” is of course problematic, a thin disguise for ruling party propaganda and brainwashing.  You may be aware of the debate which the late Oxford historian Terrence Ranger initiated about “patriotic history”.  His argument was that one can’t have ‘critical thinking’ in the context of patriotism.  In the new curriculum virtually everything is focused on Zimbabwe and virtually nothing even on the region.  This is what was done with the secondary school history and geography syllabi immediately after independence, and then later they broadened it a little. 

The new focus on mass displays is also worrying. “Mass displays” are North Korean specialities.  The ideas of “harmony”, “collective”, “discipline” etc have the flavour (odour?) of totalitarianism, and I believe this is how they are intended here.  Whilst they are not harmful as an activity of co-operation, fitting into a larger group, even aesthetics, they can certainly be misused to try to produce conformity. It seems to clear to me that that is the intention here. Indeed mass displays are emblematic of a desire to prevent children from innovation and the ability to question their surroundings and the order they live in.

There are other aspects of the curriculum which make little sense. For example why are primary children going to be taught foreign languages? In my view our focus should be on ensuring that every child is able to read, write and spell their mother tongue  and English in primary school. Experts the world over are agreed that a good knowledge of one’s mother tongue is the most important educational building block one can give a child, followed by a good knowledge of English, the world’s business language.  A foreign language in my view would properly belong in secondary school. 

Likewise Music and art activities are certainly important in the pre-school years, but require well-trained teachers for them not to be simply repetitive and non-creative.  They require equipment, or at the very least an extremely imaginative teacher to make use of materials available in the environment.

My general impression of this is that this new curriculum is just for show. It attempts to make us look good and progressive when everyone knows that it can never be implemented.   We need to concentrate on the basic skills of literacy and numeracy with some knowledge of the social and physical environment, health, nutrition, and some simple productive experience. The arts should be for creative expression not for economic purposes at primary level. This is typical ZANU PF – showing off when there is no meaningful and realistic substance, copying bits and pieces from other jurisdictions without considering their transferability.

If anyone doubts what I am saying one need simply ask what provision has been made for training teachers to teach the new curriculum, for the production of new text books and equipment needed to teach the new subjects. The answer it clear – no provision has been made and there is little indication that the massive resources required to retrain teachers and produce millions of new text books are going to be made available in the near future.

In short the new curriculum, as presently structured and financed, is not the panacea we have been waiting for. If Zimbabwe is to achieve excellence in education we need to remove politicians from the process; we have thousands of highly competent educationalists both within the country and in the diaspora who need to be engaged to produce a curriculum which will prepare our children appropriately. And there cannot be one size which fits all; the curriculum must be tailored fun a way which recognizes the massive gulf between facilities available at schools in the short term and the current job market. In other words it must be tied to current realities and be linked to a broader economic plan which will see the transformation of Zimbabwe’s economy, and educational system in the medium and long term.

4. Education as business

Let me end on a constructive, positive note. For all my criticisms of current government policy my faith in Zimbabwe and her education sector remains firm. Zimbabwe in general and her education sector in particular has tremendous promise and great future if we implement sound policies now.

Key to this is the notion that education is business. There are a few facets to this phrase. Firstly the establishment of an excellent education system is the sine qua non of strong economic growth in future. Without our schools producing high quality engineers, doctors, technicians and architects our economy will never achieve its true potential. We are far too reliant on external skills, on people who do not have a passion for our nation because they aren’t citizens.

But secondly we, especially those of us involved in private education, must grasp that education in itself can become a growth industry and a generator of foreign exchange. Our private education sector has some unique comparative advantages which we are not exploiting. It is a fact that we have some of the finest teachers and education facilities in the world, we have a rich education legacy and despite the problems we face still enjoy some of the highest literacy rates anywhere. We are blessed with one of the best climates in the world, with delightful people, with relatively low crime rates. In addition nearly all our private schools offer real value for money. In other words Zimbabwean Trust schools already enjoy high levels of excellence.

Tragically because of the decline in the wider economy many Trust Schools are in financial difficulties and I am told that right across the nation there has been a decline in students. The Chinese use the same word to describe problem and opportunity – and we need to apply the same to our own outlook.

Now is the time to start marketing our tremendous product internationally. Virtually every school has wasted capacity. In my view we need a drive to attract foreign students and we should not restrict our vision to southern Africa. There are many parents in Asia, for example, who want their children to get an excellent understanding of English. Some pay tens of thousands of Pounds to educate their children in Britain, and yet we can provide them with an education which is just as good, if not even better, for half the price.

In short it time for the ATS to be more outward looking. It is time for ATS to start branding our schools internationally. A concerted drive in this regard would alleviate immediate short term financial woes but more importantly in the medium and long term would force all of us to compare our product with what is offered internationally. One key to excellence is being internationally competitive. The time for resting on our rather parochial national standard is over.

I wish you all the very best in your deliberations this week.

Senator David Coltart
Victoria Falls
Monday 5th June 2017

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Gukurahundi cover-up fears in Kezi

The Standard

By Nqobani Ndlovu

4th June 2017

Suspected human bones believed to be of victims of the Gukurahundi massacres discovered in Kezi, Matabeleland South last week were “hurriedly” reburied without any forensic analysis, raising questions that government is “hiding something”.
Kezi is one of the areas that bore the brunt of the mass killings and one of the most notorious “concentration” camps known as Bhalagwe is found there.

In the ’80s, an army crack unit specially trained by North Korean instructors, rampaged through the Matabeleland and Midlands provinces, killing an estimated 20 000 innocent civilians, according to the Catholic Commission for Peace and Justice.

Kezi was one of the areas that were heavily targeted.

Last week, villagers found human remains scattered along the banks of Bhode River near Kezi business centre and several were dug out at the instructions of Chief Nyangazonke.

Chief Nyangazonke on Sunday ordered the villagers to re-bury the remains without any forensic investigation to establish their identity and cause of death, a move roundly condemned by the opposition and researchers as depressing and unfortunate.

The remains were re-buried on Wednesday at the Kezi Rural Hospital graveyard, councillor Sinikiwe Moyo confirmed.

“On Sunday at a ward meeting, Chief Nyangazonke ordered all village heads and villagers to come and re-bury the bones on Wednesday. No one could challenge him. At the reburial, the chief was not there, the police were not there, people were being led by their village heads.

“All the bones were gathered and put in bags and were reburied at Kezi Hospital graveyard. No one knows what happened in the area or who these people were,” Moyo said, adding this was not the first time human remains have been discovered at the area.

“Every year during the rainy season, human remains are discovered. These people were buried close to the river and once it rains, the bones are exposed.

“We always make reports to the police but we get told to re-bury them. So every year we have been re-burying human remains.”

Chief Nyangazonke was not answering his mobile phone on Friday, and it was not reachable yesterday.

However, the opposition condemned the hurried re-burial of the human remains without any forensic investigation, with MDC T spokesperson Obert Gutu saying the “Gukurahundi truth cannot be suppressed indefinitely”.

Gutu heaped all blame on Zanu PF.

“It is more than clear and obvious that the human remains that were recently discovered in the Kezi area date back from the Gukurahundi era. In fact, this is the main reason why the Zanu PF regime rushed to re-bury the human remains without subjecting them to a forensic analysis,” he said in an interview on Friday.

“This is a most unfortunate and depressing event because it shows and proves, beyond a shadow of doubt, that the Zanu PF regime is not keen on bringing closure to the victims of the Gukurahundi genocide.

“However, the truth cannot be suppressed indefinitely.”

Zanu PF spokesperson, Simon Khaya-Moyo refused to comment on the matter yesterday.

“I don’t want to comment on something that I do not know,” he said. “I need to have all the information about the discovered human remains, the whole story before I comment.”

Politician David Coltart, who wrote extensively on the Gukurahundi massacres in his biography titled The Struggle Continues: 50 Years Of Tyranny in Zimbabwe, said the re-burial of the human remains without any identification showed government “wanted to hide something”.

“It is wrong to re-bury the remains without taking any effort to establish whose remains they are,” he said.

“There are many surviving relatives and loved ones who do not know what happened to deceased loved ones who sometimes disappeared without trace. In this modern scientific age, DNA sampling can establish the identity of remains and this should always be done before remains are re-buried.”

Coltart added: “Furthermore, some of these graves may be crime scenes and so it is always important to conduct a thorough forensic study of such sites before they are disrupted and potential evidence lost.

“Suspicions will certainly be raised that the government is hiding something if the government is seen to hurriedly re-bury remains without engaging local communities and forensic experts.”

Despite President Robert Mugabe admitting Gukurahundi was a “moment of madness”, his party is still determined to suppress any discussion or investigation of the matter.

Human remains have also been discovered in other districts such as Lupane, in Matabeleland North province.

In 2011, pupils playing football at the grounds of St Paul Secondary School stumbled on human bones sticking out of the ground.

Finland Zimbabwean-based researcher and scholar of African politics, Obert Hodzi said the way the Kezi bones were handled raised eyebrows.

“The burial of human remains without proper investigation and determination of whether those remains are forensics or not raises grave suspicions that the authorities have something to hide,” he said.

“Just assuming the remains are from the liberation war without conducting proper investigations seem to be an attempt to shrug off possibilities that they might be remains of victims of Gukurahundi.

“Considering the region in which the remains were found, there is a high possibility that they might be remains of Gukurahundi.

“Authorities should have conducted through investigations, at least out of respect for survivors and families of Gukurahundi victims who are still searching for the remains of their missing relatives.”

Vice President Phelekezela Mphoko is facing spirited resistance from within his own Zanu PF party to the National Peace and Reconciliation Bill, which seeks to bring closure to past conflicts that among others, include Gukurahundi.

Recently-released diplomatic cables sent to London and Washington at the height of the Gukurahundi have revealed how countries such as Britain chose to ignore the atrocities to protect their own interests.

They also show the extent to which politicians and army generals such as Emmerson Mnangagwa, Sidney Sekeramayi, Constantino Chiwenga and Perence Shiri were involved in the atrocities.

The cables describe the killings as ethnic cleansing as the North Korean-trained brigade targeted Ndebele-speaking supporters of late Vice President Joshua Nkomo’s Zapu.

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Mugabe spends a staggering 77 days out of Zim in 2017

The Standard

By Xolisani Ncube

28th May 2017

President Robert Mugabe spent a staggering 77 days out of the country in the first five months of the year as his love for foreign travel continues to drain the cash-strapped government.
Mugabe arrived in the country on Friday after spending a week at the Mexican resort of Cancún where he attended a Global Platform for Disaster Risk Reduction conference.

The 93-year-old ruler left the country on May 19 with an entourage of at least 35 officials, including bodyguards and Cabinet ministers.
The Cancún conference was running for three days but Mugabe was at the resort for seven days.

Besides attending international summits where at times he turns out to be the only head of state, Mugabe has increased his medical trips to Singapore at the taxpayer’s expense.

He began 2017 in foreign lands after he left the country on December 21 for his annual holiday. He only returned to the country towards the end of January.

Mugabe has since flown out of the country 10 times, twice to Singapore for treatment and attended five conferences.

Since January 17 when he left his Dubai holiday base for China on official business while on leave, Mugabe has travelled an estimated 145 000km across the globe, visiting at least three continents in the process.

He has so far spent 250 hours in the air flying from Harare to various destinations that include Dubai, China, Mali, South Africa, Singapore and Mexico.

His holiday to Dubai, according to former Finance minister Tendai Biti, gobbled no less than $6 million.

During the vacation, Mugabe travelled to China, spending at least 14 hours in the air for the return trip.

The Chinese trip, according to government officials, was organised to push for the implementation of “mega-deals” signed between Harare and Beijing two years ago.

He, again, left his Dubai base for Singapore, for yet another medical check-up before flying to Mali for the 27th Africa-France Summit in Mali on January 17.

The veteran leader, who hardly sends representatives to any summit, returned to Harare on January 27 after flying for more than eight hours from Dubai.

He left Harare for Ethiopia on the same day for the Africa Union summit.

Mugabe returned home on January 31 after spending three days in Addis Ababa.

He did not travel outside the country the whole of February but was back in the air soon after his lavish 93rd birthday celebrations for a “routine eye check-up” in Singapore on March 1.

For the trip, Mugabe chartered an ultra-luxurious Boeing 767-200 Extended Range aircraft at a cost of $1 million as Air Zimbabwe planes were grounded.

He spent at least five days in Singapore and on his return, he spent less than 12 hours in Zimbabwe as he was on another flight to Ghana for the West African country’s Independence celebrations.

He returned home on March 8, having spent at least three days in Accra and 10 days later he was off to Swaziland for a Sadc summit.

On his return, he spent just 12 hours in Harare before heading to Mauritius for the African Economic Platform conference where he cut a lone figure with no other heads of state and governments in attendance.

Mugabe spent two days in Mauritius but there was nothing to show for his sojourn. The Zanu PF leader did not travel in April but on May 1 he flew out to South Africa for the World Economic Forum.

He returned home on May 5 and spent less than three days before heading back to Singapore for a medical check-up. He returned on May 13.

Six days later, Mugabe was shelling $3 million to charter a plane to Cancún. There are reports that he spent eight days in Singapore with his large entourage.

From January 1 to May 27, Mugabe has spent more days in foreign lands compared to the 69 days he has stayed in his troubled country.

According to Finance ministry statistics, in the first 10 months of 2016, Mugabe made at least 20 trips abroad, spending $36 million, up from $33 million he used the previous year.

The $20 million he has spent on foreign trips so far is more than the combined budget allocated to the Foreign Affairs ministry which has 47 foreign missions to look after, and that of the Sport ministry.

It is also more than the budget allocated to the Industry, Trade and Commerce ministry, which was given $17 million for 2017.

Former Education minister, David Coltart said Mugabe’s trips were a waste of resources as nothing tangible had come out of them.

“This is a waste of resources, to say the least,” he said.

“It is a shame that from all the trips President Mugabe has made, no investment deal has been struck or discussed. In most of the cases, the trips have to do with his health.”

He said the Zimbabwean leader must emulate United States President Donald Trump, who only made his first foreign trip last week following his inauguration on January 20.

“We have to deal with our attitude as a country; it’s not about the president alone, even his ministers, they must live and work for the people of Zimbabwe,” he said.

Biti said the numerous foreign trips were now a cash cow for Mugabe’s aides who were getting “extortionate” per diems.

“It is a parasitic mindset. Mugabe must just stop it,” he charged.

“It is bleeding our purse. The idea of looting like there is no tomorrow is not workable. Soon there will be nothing to loot.”

However, Higher and Tertiary Education minister Jonathan Moyo launched a spirited defence of Mugabe’s trips on Twitter after Zimbabweans took to social media to vent their anger.

“Cde, things aren’t always what they seem,” Moyo tweeted in response to a tweet by prominent lawyer Alex Magaisa who asked: “Why spend a week for a three-day event when he could have sent a minister? You would think Zimbabwe is awash with cash.”

Moyo added: “Pres Mugabe is a master at using multilateral events to benefit Zim interests.”

In response to a tweet by the respected Foreign Policy magazine claiming “on a trip Mugabe gave his entourage $1 000 to spend a day, Moyo said: “This is a clear fake news tweet from well-known Foreign Policy misfit engaging in mass deception to influence Zimbabwe’s 2018 elections.”

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37 years into independence has no single serviceable Zimbabwean plane

Byo24 News

By Stephen Jakes

24th May 2017

MDC senior official David Coltart who is also a former Education Minister has said Zimbabwe 37 years after its independence still has no single serviceable plane amid the ban of its dangerous plane from flying into European zones.

He said although the ruining party (Zanu PF) controlled press has not made much of it, President Robert Mugabe is presently in Mexico attending a UN World Conference on Disaster Risk Reduction.

“It is highly ironic that he flew in there on a chartered plane (similar to the one pictured below) because 37 years into independence there is not a single serviceable Zimbabwean plane to take him there. In fact, one of the reasons the EU has barred Air Zimbabwe from flying into Europe is because of that fact, and because our radar systems do not meet EU standards, in other words, they are unsafe and could cause a disaster,” said the former minister.

“In the last few decades, Zimbabwe has faced a number of men made disasters including hyperinflation, the collapse of our economy, the exodus of hundreds of thousands of our skilled professionals and technicians including doctors and nurses – all caused by the ruinous policies of the party Mugabe leads. In addition, the same ruining party has been woefully incapable of dealing with the natural disasters this region has suffered during the same period including droughts and floods.”

Coltart said the use of an expensive charter plane to fly Mugabe to Mexico is emblematic of all that is wrong with this regime: the collapse of once fine institutions like Air Zimbabwe, a shocking notion of where our priorities lie, a callous disregard for the needs of the people and the ongoing pretence that all is well in our nation.

“In today’s press Vice President Emmerson Mnangagwa claimed that Zanu PF has created 2,2 million jobs since 2013, something everyone, with even half a brain, knows is simply a brazen lie,” he said.

“The reality is, of course, something quite different to what both Mr Mugabe will tell the UN in Cancun and what Mnangagwa is saying back home. Our economy is on its knees; had we not had a wonderful rainy season this year Zimbabwe would have faced a catastrophic disaster. The blushes of the ruining party have been saved for one more season, but the reality is that the poor economic and humanitarian fundamentals have not changed one iota.”

He said the best Disaster Risk Reduction strategy Zimbabwe can take is to end the disastrous policies consistently implemented by Zanu PF since it came to power in 1980.

“But that will only be achieved when Zimbabweans themselves wake up to this reality; those democrats opposed to Zanu PF and its corrupt policies must form a common front and those flirting with this appalling regime must stop if they want to see our beloved nation reach its true potential,” Coltart said.

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“Let us not become weary in doing good” – The 2017 Petra Address by Senator David Coltart

The 2017 Petra Address

Given on Founders Day 23rd May 2017 at Petra Primary School

By Senator David Coltart

“Let us not become weary in doing good for at the proper time we will reap a harvest if we do not give up”

Just over 31 years ago on 12 March 1986 at the annual general meeting of the Bulawayo Presbyterian Church I spoke about my concern for the education of children and proposed combining with other churches to set up a school. That proposal was accepted and taken up by several spirited people from the Presbyterian, Baptist and Methodist churches in Bulawayo.
One man in particular, John Cuddington, took up that original vision as his own and almost single-mindedly devoted the rest of his life, until his death, in 1999 towards making the dream of a Christian school a reality.

In 13 short years John, more than any other individual, was responsible for transforming a barren dusty stretch of land into Petra Primary School and then subsequently Petra High School. It is hard to imagine when we look at the beautiful buildings we have today, the lush green playing fields, our swimming pools and all the other developments at the schools that this was just a stretch of bush. When we started we had no land, no money to build the schools, no teachers and very little enthusiasm from people outside of those three churches to build the schools.

When we started Petra there was still a civil war raging around Bulawayo-people were still being killed by dissidents and soldiers . In other words it was a very difficult environment in which to build a school. John himself was not a particularly well man and had a variety of health issues. He had a young family and a very busy accounting practice which gave him very little time to devote to building a new school. But despite those obstacles he soldiered on and he, with others, transformed that barren stretch of land into what you see today.

It is entirely appropriate that the Avenue of trees which join the primary school to the high school is named John’s walk, after John Cuddington. One thing that always impressed me about John was his indefatigable nature. Although confronted by obstacles at every turn he truly never became weary. Even when he was opposed in his plans , even by some of his closest friends he persevered. For example John always wanted to build a High School whereas I was not sure it was the right thing to do and opposed his suggestion. He quietly, but doggedly, persuaded me and others round to his way of thinking and through that the high school became a reality.

John died suddenly in April 1999 and I wondered at the time whether the High School in particular would survive without John’s courageous leadership. As we know since 1999 Zimbabwe has been wracked by political instability, hyperinflation, the exodus of thousands of Zimbabweans and the near total collapse of the economy.

It is important to note that John in fact never saw the completion of the High School because when he died it was still small and most the buildings we have today weren’t built. In fact if we had known in 1999 all that the country was about to go through few would have given us good odds that the schools would have survived.

And yet survived they have. In fact despite ongoing challenges our schools are growing stronger as evidenced by superb academic results and the ongoing construction of facilities such as the swimming pool.

It is good to be inspired by others. The Bible in Hebrews 12 says this :

“Therefore since we are surrounded by such a great cloud of witnesses, let us throw off everything that hinders and the sin that so easily entangles us and let us run with perseverance the race marked out for us.”

John Cuddington, arguably one of our greatest Founders of the school, is one such person in this cloud of witnesses, but there are many others throughout the world who are part of this cloud of witnesses who are there to inspire each one of us, as we run the race marked out for us. Because – believe me – each one of us here has a unique race God has marked out for us to run.

As you study history I urge you to study the lives of people who have gone before us to see how they have run this race.

One of my greatest heroes is Abraham Lincoln, the 16th President of the United States of America who almost single handedly brought slavery to an end in the USA. Because Lincoln is such a massive figure in American history one might think that he was a person who was powerful all his life, and that he achieved what he did through good fortune. In fact Lincoln struggled his entire life. He was born into a a poor, uneducated, family. His mother died when he was 9 years old and he had a difficult relationship with his father. He married a rather difficult woman and they suffered greatly in that they lost 3 of their 4 sons before they turned 18.

When Lincoln first publicly opposed slavery in the USA in 1854 it was not as popular sentiment and he attracted a lot of hostility. When he ran for the Senate in 1854 his views did not enjoy the support of most people and he lost. Three years later the US Supreme Court in the case of Dred Scott versus Standford ruled that black Americans were not citizens and had no constitutional rights – which demonstrates just how out of step Lincoln was with most white Americans. Lincoln criticized the judgment saying that ” this government cannot endure permanently half slave and half free” – and in so doing predicted the civil war that engulfed the USA 3 years later.

In 1859 Lincoln consolidated his record of failure by standing for the Senate again and again losing.

But he never gave up and just a year later he was remarkably elected President of the USA. But that was just the beginning of his battles – just weeks after his election secessionists started speaking publicly about r plans to split the QUSS and to secede. A month after he was inaugurated President in March 1861 the US Civil War broke out. The war went badly for the Union forces under Lincoln and Lincoln was blamed for choosing poor Generals.

The war of course was all about slavery. Had Lincoln relented in his views on wanting the end of slavery he could have satisfied some of his critics and brought the war to an end – but he persevered in the face of criticisms across the political spectrum. So called
“Copperheads” criticized Lincoln for refusing to compromise; others criticized him for moving too slowly in abolishing slavery.

And yet in the face of setbacks on the battlefields and widespread criticism he persevered and on the 22nd September 1862 he announced the Emancipation Declaration, freeing all slaves in the USA. When he did so he said:

“I have never felt more certain that I was doing right” . But when he announced the Emancipation Declaration many feared that all he had was prolong the terrible war. The Declaration in fact spurred the Confederate armies and emboldened them. Last year my family and I were able to walk across the Gettysburg battlefield – one of the great battles of the US civil war fought in 1863. It was a horrendous battle which cost the lives of thousands in a few days.

Soon after that battle was fought Lincoln himself visited the battlefield and delivered his famous Gettysburg address. A dignitary who was one of America’s most famous orators, rambled on for two hours before Lincoln spoke. Lincoln was feeling terrible – he was feverish and had a severe headache – he delivered a short speech which only lasted 2 minutes. The speech was only 272 words long and yet it became one of the most powerful speeches ever delivered.

It was in that speech that Lincoln coined the phrase and proclaimed the resolve that “government of the people, by the people, for the people shall not perish from the earth”. In ten short sentences he was able to inspire a nation to victory. That phrase has since been used
on countless occasions to inspire people struggling for freedom across the globe.

The Civil war however raged on until April 1865. Shortly before it ended when Lincoln was inaugurated as President for his second term on the 4 March 1865 he said the following words:

“With malice towards none, with charity to all…as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in; to bind up the nation’s wounds – to do all we may achieve and cherish a just and lasting peace among ourselves.”

In other words Lincoln endured – he never became weary in doing good, as God showed him what was good. And yet Lincoln too never saw the final harvest. Although the war came to an end a month later Lincoln was assassinated on the 14th April 1865. It happened on Good Friday. A few days before Lincoln had indicated that he was not satisfied with simply ending slavery – he spoke about giving black people the right to vote as well – words that inflamed his assassin.

You may all be thinking – just what is the relevance of all this history? Well I believe that from just the the lives of two of this great cloud of witnesses, one a founder of these schools, John Cuddington, the other one of the world’s greatest leaders, Abraham Lincoln, we have much to learn.

Note the following:

All of us have a race marked out for us by God. None of us are exempt. The younger people here have your lives stretching out ahead of you and you can choose early on how you are going to live it – are you going to be influenced by this great cloud of witnesses or are you just going to ignore them?
The lives of these people show that striving for good isn’t easy. It is guaranteed to be a struggle. The easier route will be to go with the flow. If you decide to do what is right in your life you will face opposition and obstacles. Both John Cuddington and Lincoln faced opposition their entire lives but they never gave up.
Failure is part and parcel of running this race. Lincoln was considered a filed politician having lost so many races for the Senate. Even after he was elected President many people remained critical of him and thought that he was doing disastrously. Lincoln was often isolated and felt as if he was fighting a one man battle to end slavery.
It doesn’t matter what you background is – you can be used by God to achieve great things irrespective of whether you are poor, white, black, male or female. Lincoln came from the poorest of backgrounds, lost his mother at an early age and had to struggle his whole life.
Note how both John Cuddington and Lincoln never lived to reap the harvest they had sown. Both were taken before they were able to enjoy the fruit of their labour – and yet as we see in these schools today because John Cuddington never gave up his harvest has been reaped. Likewise Lincoln never saw the fruit of his work but the world has reaped the benefit of his great work. In other words the “proper time” we read in that verse in Galatians is God’s time not ours.

But the greatest lesson of all is how both John Cuddington and Abraham Lincoln did not become weary in doing good all their days.

In that same Hebrews verse I quoted if you read on you will see the following words:

“Let us fix our eyes on Jesus, the author and perfectos of our faith, who for the joy set before him endured the cross, scorning its shame. Consider him who endured such opposition from sinful men, so that you will not grow weary and lose heart.”

Both John Cuddington and Abraham Lincoln were both men who placed their full trust in Jesus. They were inspired by how Jesus never tired in doing good, by how Jesus endured opposition from religious and political leaders of the time and how Jesus was persecuted for doing good. They were both able to see that although Jesus was crucified on a cross he rose again and through that the good news of salvation has spread throughout the world.

John Cuddington and Lincoln both knew that their strength to carry on in the face of tremendous odds came solely from trusting in Jesus. Because of that they never waivered in their lives and God used them to do great things, despite opposition from “sinful men”. They were both also guided by God in the work they did – remember the words of Lincoln – he said “as God gives us to see the right”.

In ending I have a few things for you to ponder:

Do you want to do great and good things in your life?
What is going to characterize your life?
If you do want to do great things how are you not going to become weary in the face of the opposition which will surely follow your efforts?
Have you seriously considered the claims of Jesus in your life because, both in my own experience and from this cloud of great witnesses, we have evidence that you will not be able to run with perseverance that race marked out for you without His help?

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Top Zimbabwean Official wants to abolish dual citizenship

Eyewitness News

12th May 2017

Zimbabwe’s four-year-old Constitution allows people to hold more than one passport, but Registrar General Tobaiwa Mudede says he wants to change that.

A top Zimbabwe official wants to ban dual citizenship and lawyers are outraged.

Zimbabwe’s four-year-old Constitution allows people to hold more than one passport, but Registrar General Tobaiwa Mudede says he wants to change that.

The part of the new Constitution that gave Zimbabweans the right to another passport was widely supported.

But the state-run Chronicle is reporting that Mudede wants the charter amended to abolish that right.

He says dual citizenship can fuel crimes like human trafficking and tax evasion.

What he doesn’t say is that it can allow Zimbabweans born in the diaspora or those who’ve acquired another passport to vote in elections.

Law expert Alex Magaisa said Mudede’s been defying the new charter from day one.

Human rights lawyer David Coltart tweeted that Mudede wanted to take the country back to the dark ages.

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Zimbabwe’s protest Pastor Mawarire set to rattle Mugabe… again

News 24

By Njabulo Ncube

5 May 2017

Harare – Zimbabwe clergy Evan Mawarire of #This Flag fame is bringing together social movements against President Robert Mugabe ahead of the 2018 polls amid increasing calls for opposition leaders to swiftly bring to finality a grand coalition.

Elections are tentatively set for July 2018 but the country’s opposition parties are still dithering on concluding coalition talks despite the main opposition MDC led by Morgan Tsvangirai signing memorandum of agreements with other smaller parties, including Joice Mujuru’s National People’s Party and Welshman Ncube’s political formation.

With the opposition still to conclude coalition talks, Mawarire’s move this week to bring together social movements, among them Tajamuka, is seen as nudging Mugabe’s nemesis closer.

Sources in the opposition told News24 that there is “trepidation and suspicion” within the leaders of the main opposition following the pastor’s latest stance. The development is gaining currency, with weary citizens fed up with a fragmented opposition.

‘I don’t think everyone needs to join political parties’

“We (social movements) are together to say: Enough is enough,” said Mawarire, who last year earned the ire of Mugabe and Zanu-PF after a nationwide strike which brought the country to a standstill.

“The unprecedented mobilisation of Zimbabwe everywhere has begun,” he added.

Analysts told News24 that a coalition of activists as initiated by Mawarire blends well with aspirations of Tsvangirai and other opposition leaders ahead of 2018 polls.

Mugabe is seeking a fifth term at the ripe age of 94 and has been in power since independence from colonial Britain in 1980.

Opposition politician and human rights lawyer David Coltart sees Mawarire playing a similar role as Archbishop Desmond Tutu and the United Democratic Front towards the democratisation of South Africa.

Coltart told News24: “I don’t think everyone needs to join political parties. If Pastor Evan can play a similar role to the one Archbishop Tutu and the UDF played in the final years of apartheid then they will perform a valuable role.”

Mugabe’s power base

Analysts, however, remain adamant that any effective strategy to dislodge Mugabe will inevitably have to be well co-ordinated and organised.

“For Mawarire, the primary challenge will be to bring together real and organic social movements beyond social media. He needs to mobilise around dislocating Mugabe’s power base beyond state security that is snatching away the peasantry, labour, unemployed youth and the given population in urban areas through a programme that addresses their socio-economic quagmire.

“Anything shot of this is as futile as singing to the choir on social media and Mawarire has some homework to do in order to overcome this toll order,” said an official working for a foreign development agency, who preferred to remain anonymous for fear of being accused of funding social movements.

Thulani Mswelanto, a political analyst who doubles up as programmes manager at Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition said any initiative to come up with a consolidated and co-ordinated framework for social movement is welcome, pointing out it would amplify the isolated voices.

Extensive consultation

“However there is need for extensive consultations among the various social movements and stakeholders so that there are no conflicting messages. Most of these social movements operate on horizontal structures using committee systems and the proposed framework must then address the very genealogy of the movements and at what level they co-operate. Above all for the co-ordination to succeed there is need for consensus building and shared visioning,” said Mswelanto.

Bhekithemba Mhlanga, a political analyst based in the United Kingdom who left Zimbabwe more than a decade ago, weighed in saying it would be folly for opposition parties not to embrace the idea at a time everyone is fade up with the Zanu PF strongman.

“Zimbabwe needs fresh leadership, fresh ideas and fresh faces. The coalition of activists dispels the myth that political space is only for a chosen few,” said Mhlanga.

“No one has a monopoly to participate in politics in Zimbabwe.

“Those with the best prospects will win the hearts and minds of voters – established or new, young or old.”

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