Zimbabwe – India unlikely to back Robert Mugabe’s plan to pull out of the United Nations

Blastingnews.com

29th September 2016

By Jane Powers

In a press briefing earlier this week, Rungsung Masakui, the Indian Ambassador to #Zimbabwe said in a statement that #India is unlikely to join into Mugabe’s call for a new body to be formed independently of the #United Nations. “All Africa” reported on 24 September that upon arrival at Harare after the United Nations General Assembly earlier this month, that African and Asian countries would pull out of the UN and form their own “splinter body.” India was specifically mentioned in Mugabe’s announcement that took place at the Harare International Airport.

Mugabe’s mention of India

Mugabe mentioned India towards the end of his statement, saying, “They (UN) must not cry foul when countries from these regions pull out and form our own Union,” and “The Union will have countries such as China, India, and other Asian countries, and then we have to see that which countries will remain in the United Nations.”

The sudden announcement by Mugabe was a bit of a shock as Masakui pointed out that Mugabe did not “raise these issues at the United Nations General Assembly.” However, “News Day” reported that whilst India did not want to talk about it very much, that in a theoretical scenario, India would probably not leave the UN to join the proposed splinter body and would more likely “continue to call for reform of the UNSC from within the structures of the UN.”

Mugabe’s destructive capacity

It is not beyond the bounds of possibility for Mugabe to pull out of world recognized bodies. Back in 2003 in a fit of rage Mugabe withdrew Zimbabwe from the Commonwealth when the organization suspended the country over vote-rigging and human rights abuses. Referring to that pull-out as Mugabe’s destructive capacity, Former Minister for Education, David Coltart said of the UN split announcement to “The New Zimbabwe” that, “(Mugabe’s) pull out of the Commonwealth, and SADC Tribunal…shows one should never underestimate his destructive capacity.”

Interesting politics of the Security Council
It appears that Mugabe is furious as the African Union has been thwarted in their attempts to become a permanent member of the United Nations Security Council (UNSC). According to Mugabe, China and Russia backed his position on giving the African Union veto powers. This is an interesting comment, as Russia, Britain, France, and the United States make up the UN Security Council.

Nevertheless, it is unclear how Russia and China stand on the issue – given that India seemed a bit on the back foot when they learned that they too supported the splinter group. Whilst India agrees that there should be reforms in the UN and expanded powers to the African block, they will “continue to fight for reform of the UN from within” and will keep a close watch on Zimbabwean developments with regards to investment and “when there is a policy shift, we will jump in,” Masakui said.

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‘They tried to crush her spirit’: Anti-Mugabe activist ordered freed after 82 days in custody

News24

Correspondent

27th September 2016

Harare – Critics of Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe have been celebrating a court order for the release of an anti-government activist who has been in custody for nearly 12 weeks.

But there are loud questions as to why mother-of-five Linda Masarira of the Tajamuka [We are Agitated] protest movement was kept inside a maximum security prison for so long.

She was arrested on July 6 in Harare. Lawyers have been trying to get her freed ever since.

Masarira has not been tried or convicted of a crime. But her case has been complicated by a warrant of arrest issued against her in the eastern city of Mutare on June 6, when she did not turn up for a court hearing on a different matter.

She says she was in hospital on that day receiving treatment for a dislocated finger sustained during a police beating.

She’s been seen in court recently with bandages on her hand.

Thelma Chikwanha of the Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights said on Facebook on Monday: “Justice [David] Mangota has ordered the release of Linda Masarira who has been in custody since her arrest on 6 July.”

“Great stuff,” commented former finance minister and opposition leader Tendai Biti on Twitter.

Pastor Mawarire, who was arrested on July 12 for organising a stayaway and is now living in exile, tweeted: “Victory is not only Linda’s release. It is that she still stands strong coz they tried 2 crush her spirit. Welcome home @lilomatic #ThisFlag”.

David Coltart, Zimbabwe’s former education minister, wrote on Facebook: “This is another example of law being used as a weapon against those who oppose this corrupt and ruthless regime.”

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A remarkable testament of hope for Zimbabwe

The Spectator

15 September 2016

By Matthew Parris

David Coltart’s memoir describes incredible courage as well as political folly and human brutality

‘One who never turned his back but marched breast forward,
Never doubted clouds would break,
Never dreamed though right were worsted, wrong would triumph
Held we fall to rise, are baffled to fight better,
Sleep to wake.’

This comes from Robert Browning’s ‘Epilogue’. It is quoted (though not of himself) in a staggering book by an author who in my eyes holds as good a claim to exemplify its spirit as anyone in the 20th-century history of Africa. Yes, anyone, including the many brave black freedom fighters, from Nelson Mandela down, who kept their heads held high when the odds seemed all against them. Even on Robben Island, even in the winter of his discomfort, -Mandela knew that history was on his side.

David Coltart never did, and does not now — how can he? — yet still he believes, still he risks his life. I want to ask why, and how, and in what he has reposed his trust.

Coltart is the white former Rhodesian, now Zimbabwean, whose life has been spent fighting for justice, education and sound administration in the exasperating, beguiling country of my own upbringing. He started his adult years in Rhodesia’s British South Africa Police as a one-time admirer of Ian Smith and that reckless populist’s white supremacist breakaway government — I suppose you’d call it Rhexit now. It took Coltart some time to conclude that Smith was leading his country down a cul-de-sac, and in terms of black advancement was not a visionary or even a gradualist, but a reactionary.

He developed a wary respect for Robert Mugabe, so it took him some time — and the evidence of his own eyes — to accept the reality of the Matabeleland massacres, and I sense that even near Robert Mugabe’s end, even after Mugabe’s followers’ repeated attempts to assassinate him (chronicled here like the occasional rainy day), Coltart retains some lingering sense of the greatness that was within Mugabe’s reach.

He went into the law, risking much by his defence of human rights in the face of advancing autocracy, and to this I shall return. Then he went into politics, was -elected — one of four brave white MPs — for Morgan Tsvangirai’s opposition Movement for Democratic Change, and spent years watching that party’s agonies. Finally, in 2009, Coltart became a rather unexpected Minister of Education: a bad election result had forced Mugabe’s Zanu-PF party into coalition with the MDC.

There followed four years during which, according to every reliable report, David Coltart rescued Zimbabwe’s once-proud education system: its schools on the brink of collapse, its employees on strike, its teachers unpaid. When Zanu-PF regained full control and Coltart was dismissed, he says he was relieved; but what he had achieved had — has — helped shape for the better the lives of hundreds of thousands of Zimbabwean children. He saved a country’s schools.

To describe as magnificent his recently published memoir, The Struggle Continues, is to understate. As a testament to courage it is outstanding; as a record of political folly, missed opportunity and human brutality, it is shocking. In the contrast between the often humdrum schoolboy prose, and the heroism and horror it chronicles, the book puts me in mind of the late explorer Wilfred Thesiger’s diaries. Talk about ‘underwritten’ — there are single, rather flat paragraphs without number here that any lively journalist could turn into eyewitness front-page splashes.

But Coltart’s purposes throughout his career do not include self-advertisement. In writing this book those purposes are to make, in the course of a careful record of his own life, the only reliable, scrupulous, first-hand account of half a century’s Zimbabwean-Rhodesian history that may ever be written — for many of the key players are dead or dying; and to provide, through all the struggle and every reverse, a testament of hope for the bit of Africa he knows and serves.

Why hope? The man’s courage and success spring only from hope and could have no other source, certainly not experience. Whence, then, springs the hope? I see two sources, one prosaic, one celestial.

Perhaps I should not call a belief in the rule of law prosaic, for it is the bedrock of our civilisation, and Coltart, a trained advocate, knows this. But the rule of law falls lifeless from the statute book if others do not know it too. What Coltart’s story shows is how difficult autocrats find it to chip away at a firm foundation in law, where this has been properly established in the public imagination.

Rhodesia’s judges, standing up to Ian Smith, and Zimbabwe’s judges, standing up to Zanu-PF, have had remarkable success in the last half-century. There remains a residual respect for due process in both white and black minds, and its power should never be underestimated. Thugs and despots across the globe do trample on systems of justice, but they are ashamed when they do. Coltart and many others in Rhodesia and then Zimbabwe have shamed many, and sometimes shamed them out of their misdeeds. It is rather surprising how successfully this has been done, and for how long.

Most of us, I think, find the pomposity and self-regard of the legal profession and the whole judicial process often infuriating. Reading The Struggle Continues, though, I begin to wonder whether the self-belief of lawyers and legislators may not be as much a bulwark against tyranny as those high-flown phrases about vision and progress that have, perhaps, an easier purchase on shallow minds.

The more celestial source of Coltart’s steady optimism is one that, as an avowed atheist, I find difficult to acknowledge. When a young man he had an, if not damascene, then certainly all-consuming conversion to Christianity and its God. This he maintained and maintains, through it all.

I think this man’s creed unreasonable. See, through his eyes, what he has seen and you will find it hard to share his confidence in Zimbabwe’s future. But what else can sustain hope in the face of insufficient reason for hope, save a stubborn faith in something beyond reason? I simply ask.

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Zimbabwe’s military and ruling party will do anything to hold on to power warns former minister

International Business Times

By Elsa Buchanan

September 14, 2016

Former Minister David Coltart claims military will “do anything in their power to hang on” in 2018 polls.

Zimbabwe’s ruling party, Zanu-PF, and the military may be fracturing along generational lines but many underestimate party members and officers’ determination to stay in power as the 2018 general elections approach, former Education Minister David Coltart has claimed.

After decades of quelled frustrations under President Robert Mugabe’s iron-fisted rule, the country has been rocked by grassroots protest movements calling for change as the ruling party splits over who will succeed him (read below: Is Zimbabwe’s military splitting?).

The reportedly divided Zanu-PF will seek to extend its 36-year rule in the 2018 general election, but opposition political parties, which are hoping to force Zanu PF out, remain deeply disorganised despite a number of coalitions already in place.

Speaking to IBTimes UK, Coltart, who was Minister between 2009 and 2013 under the opposition MDC and Zanu-PF coalition government, claimed Zanu-PF officials will “do anything in their power to hang on” come 2018.

Is Zimbabwe’s military splitting?

The malaise comes during a bitter political battle within Mugabe’s ruling Zanu-PF, which has seen two rival factions, called the G40 and Team Lacoste, fight for control of the party – and ultimately for Mugabe’s succession.

It is understood that the head of Zimbabwe Defence Forces (ZDF), General Constantine Chiwenga, supports Vice-President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s faction Team Lacoste, backed by the war veterans. In the past, the “war vets” and Mnangagwa have been the key pillars underpinning Mugabe’s regime.

Meanwhile, Major General Douglas Nyiakaramba, chief of administration, is said to back Grace Mugabe’s faction.

While there are currently 34,000 living war veterans in Zimbabwe, the ZDF boasts an estimated30,000 active personnel and some 20,000 reserves, making it one of 16 most powerful armies in Africa, according to the Global Fire Power index.

“It’s hard to envision real change in 2018, partly because of the reality on the ground,” the politician said from the nation’s second-largest city, Bulawayo.

Africa’s oldest head of state faces a real threat of split within the armed forces, which could endanger the cohesion of his power base within Zanu-PF, but General Constantine Chiwenga, the commander of Zimbabwe Defence forces (ZDF), last month vowed his forces will stand by the embattled president.

Zimbabwe’s military has had a critical role in politics since the independence war against the white-minority state of Rhodesia.

‘We have underestimated the determination of the military to hold on to power’

“In the past we have always underestimated the determination of the military in particular to hold on to power. The division between the military hierarchy and Zanu-PF hierarchy has always been very difficult to differentiate,” Coltart explained.

“There has been so much fusion between the two. Even if Mugabe retires or dies, I still think that you’re going to have this streak of former war veterans – and now we also see this in people within the military – they will do anything in their power to hang on.”

Coltart, a veteran human rights lawyer, said he believes that only a complete fusion of Zimbabwe’s different parties under one political party will bring change in the 2018 general elections.

“A grand coalition is certainly something that we need. The division in the main opposition has been a gift to Mugabe and Zanu-PF. But there is a growing realisation that we can’t afford the luxury to remain divided – all these opposition parties are divided on personality rather than policy.

He added: “I am hopeful that there will be more cohesion but we have a long way to go yet. The ideal, of course, is to see not just a coalition but a complete fusion of these different parties under one political party – that would be the ideal. While I think that’s probably a bridge too far, what would be hopeful is at least a coalition in which you don’t split the votes but agree on a single opposition candidate for president.”

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Zimbabwe’s military and ruling party will do anything to hold on to power warns former minister

International Business Times

By Elsa Buchanan

14th September 2016

Former Minister David Coltart claims military will “do anything in their power to hang on” in 2018 polls.
Zimbabwe’s ruling party, Zanu-PF, and the military may be fracturing along generational lines but many underestimate party members and officers’ determination to stay in power as the 2018 general elections approach, former Education Minister David Coltart has claimed.

After decades of quelled frustrations under President Robert Mugabe’s iron-fisted rule, the country has been rocked by grassroots protest movements calling for change as the ruling party splits over who will succeed him (read below: Is Zimbabwe’s military splitting?).

The reportedly divided Zanu-PF will seek to extend its 36-year rule in the 2018 general election, but opposition political parties, which are hoping to force Zanu PF out, remain deeply disorganised despite a number of coalitions already in place.

Speaking to IBTimes UK, Coltart, who was Minister between 2009 and 2013 under the opposition MDC and Zanu-PF coalition government, claimed Zanu-PF officials will “do anything in their power to hang on” come 2018.

Is Zimbabwe’s military splitting?

The malaise comes during a bitter political battle within Mugabe’s ruling Zanu-PF, which has seen two rival factions, called the G40 and Team Lacoste, fight for control of the party – and ultimately for Mugabe’s succession.

It is understood that the head of Zimbabwe Defence Forces (ZDF), General Constantine Chiwenga, supports Vice-President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s faction Team Lacoste, backed by the war veterans. In the past, the “war vets” and Mnangagwa have been the key pillars underpinning Mugabe’s regime.

Meanwhile, Major General Douglas Nyiakaramba, chief of administration, is said to back Grace Mugabe’s faction.

While there are currently 34,000 living war veterans in Zimbabwe, the ZDF boasts an estimated30,000 active personnel and some 20,000 reserves, making it one of 16 most powerful armies in Africa, according to the Global Fire Power index.

“It’s hard to envision real change in 2018, partly because of the reality on the ground,” the politician said from the nation’s second-largest city, Bulawayo.

Africa’s oldest head of state faces a real threat of split within the armed forces, which could endanger the cohesion of his power base within Zanu-PF, but General Constantine Chiwenga, the commander of Zimbabwe Defence forces (ZDF), last month vowed his forces will stand by the embattled president.

Zimbabwe’s military has had a critical role in politics since the independence war against the white-minority state of Rhodesia.

‘We have underestimated the determination of the military to hold on to power’

“In the past we have always underestimated the determination of the military in particular to hold on to power. The division between the military hierarchy and Zanu-PF hierarchy has always been very difficult to differentiate,” Coltart explained.

“There has been so much fusion between the two. Even if Mugabe retires or dies, I still think that you’re going to have this streak of former war veterans – and now we also see this in people within the military – they will do anything in their power to hang on.”

Coltart, a veteran human rights lawyer, said he believes that only a complete fusion of Zimbabwe’s different parties under one political party will bring change in the 2018 general elections.

“A grand coalition is certainly something that we need. The division in the main opposition has been a gift to Mugabe and Zanu-PF. But there is a growing realisation that we can’t afford the luxury to remain divided – all these opposition parties are divided on personality rather than policy.

He added: “I am hopeful that there will be more cohesion but we have a long way to go yet. The ideal, of course, is to see not just a coalition but a complete fusion of these different parties under one political party – that would be the ideal. While I think that’s probably a bridge too far, what would be hopeful is at least a coalition in which you don’t split the votes but agree on a single opposition candidate for president.”

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EU plan for African investment; Zika grants for Cape Verde, Guinea Bissau; Botswana protest

Africa Times

14th September 2016

The president of the European Commission announced plans Wednesday for a new Investment Plan for Africa with the potential to raise up to €88 billion.

The plan to support African economic growth will use public funding to attract additional public and private investment, President Jean-Claude Juncker said during his State of the Union speech to the European Parliament in Strasbourg, France.

The Investment Plan for Africa, designed to align with development aid programs, sets a €44 billion target for funds to alleviate the economic push factors at the root of the dangerous migration journeys of Africans seeking a better life, Juncker said.

That funding doubles as individual EU member states commit funds to the plan, and is coupled with a proposal to coordinate EU military missions abroad and border controls at home, within a unified structure.

“Europe can no longer afford to piggy-back on the military might of others or let France alone defend its honour in Mali,” Juncker said. “We have to take responsibility for protecting our interests and the European way of life.”

Juncker’s speech comes as the EU seeks to affirm its unity and move beyond Britain’s Brexit decision, and ahead of Friday’s special summit in Bratislava, Slovakia. EU President Donald Tusk said he hopes the Bratislava meeting will be a turning point in securing European borders.

Cape Verde, Guinea Bissau receive emergency Zika grants

Cape Verde and Guinea Bissau each will receive USD $1 million in grant funding to combat the Zika virus, The African Development Bank Group (AfDB) announced Wednesday. The emergency assistance is geared toward improved sanitation, vector control and related public health measures meant to control the outbreak.

The World Health Organization is carefully monitoring both countries where Zika-related microcephaly cases are reported. “Given its presence in Cape Verde and Guinea Bissau, the WHO warns it is likely the outbreak will spread to the rest of Africa,” the AfDB said in a statement. “Lessons learned from the Bank’s support to the Ebola outbreak, point to the need to respond in a timely and focused manner.”

Zika was first seen in Uganda in 1947, and reported across Africa and Asia in the decades before its resurgence – and the link to newborn microcephaly and Guillain-Barré Syndrome – emerged as a global health threat in 2015. Cape Verde officials report 11 cases of microcephaly to date, with at least five cases in Guinea Bissau. As of September 8, there were 6,500 confirmed Zika cases in 72 countries.

At WHO, infectious disease epidemiologist Christopher Dye said an Asian strain of Zika is at work in the Cape Verde cases, but an African strain may be present in Guinea-Bissau. The Americas strain has been ruled out in Guinea-Bissau, but WHO officials warn that African public health agencies need to remain vigilant.

Botswanan activists plan Gabarone rally to support Zimbabweans

Tuesday’s announcement of a new ban on protests in Zimbabwe, prompted by plans for a weekend demonstration in Harare, has led activists in neighboring Botswana to plan their own march Friday in Gabarone. The Botswana Civil Society Solidarity Coalition for Zimbabwe (BOCISCOZ) will hold the rally to call attention to human rights violations in Zimbabwe.

Botswanans have long supported their Zimbabwean counterparts, with calls from activists in both Africa and the U.K. for Botswanan President Ian Khama and the 15-member Southern African Development Community (SADC) headquartered in Gaborone to intervene. Khama, who followed President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe as last year’s SADC chairman, has long criticized Mugabe for causing social and economic upheaval across the region as migrants flee the policy and leadership failures of Zimbabwe.

Those failures continue to deepen opposition to Mugabe and the Zanu PF, even as Zimbabwe seeks to silence protest with a new ban on constitutionally protected demonstrations. The previous ban was declared unconstitutional by Zimbabwe’s High Court last week, but the new measure circumvents that ruling as the powerful Zanu PF protects its interests ahead of 2018 elections.

Analysts including former Zimbabwe education minister David Coltart, speaking to International Business Times, warn that the ruling party intends to stay in power at any cost.

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Zimbabwe protests are putting pressure on govt: Former minister

SABC

14th September 2016

A lawyer and former Minister of Education in Zimbabwe, Senator David Coltart, says the rolling protests are putting pressure on the government.

This comes after the Zimbabwean Police re-imposed a ban on public demonstrations in the Harare Central Business District.

It is expected to last until the middle of October. This follows an earlier protest ban which the High Court suspended.

Speaking on AM Live, Coltart says, “Rolling protests in Zimbabwe are not effective on the day, but there is no doubt that they are building pressure on this regime.”

“The Zanu-PF regime has issued a number of decreases this year, they threatened to re-introduce bond notes, they banned imports, which effects the informal sector.”

He adds: “There is growing tension, it is very difficult to vent that tension, the one way has been through those demonstrations and stay-aways.”

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Zimbabwe: Former Minister David Coltart warns of violence if protests go ahead despite police ban

International Business Times

By Elsa Buchanan

13th September 2016

Exclusive: Politician’s warning comes as police issue new order extending protest ban for one month.

Zimbabwe’s former Education minister, and human rights lawyer, David Coltart has warned of a potential “increasingly hostile response from President Robert Mugabe’s regime”, including the use of the military and police to prevent an upcoming demonstration.

Last week, the High Court decided to overturn a two-week ban issued by Police officer commanding Harare central district Chief Superintendent Newbert Saunyama on demonstrations in the capital Harare. The same police official, however, issued a new banning order extending the ban for a period of a month.

The National Electoral Reform Agenda (Nera), an amalgamation of political parties focused on demanding changes ahead of the 2018 general elections, filed a legal challenge to nullify the ban.

The former opposition MP described the new banning order as “a disingenuous, cynical measure taken by the state and by the police” which will necessitate a further court application being bought by Nera to have this new banning order set aside.

‘Demonstration will carry on in spite of ban’

In a statement published on 13 September, Nera confirmed that it will carry out further protests on 17 September in spite of the ban, highlighting Section 59 of the Constitution relative to Zimbabweans’ right to present a petition to the government regarding the need for electoral reform.

“The fresh banning order has been issued to circumvent the High Court and to prevent this demonstration from taking place,” Coltart said in an exclusive interview with IBTimes UK, highlighting police’s argument that, because it is a new order, it is not subject to the High Court order and declared the original ban illegal. “Nera will do it again on Saturday irrespective of any banning order, irrespective of what the high court says about the ban.”

Zimbabwe police brutality

Pictures have emerged of Zimbabwe protesters calling on President Robert Mugabe to step down beaten by riot police in Harare on 17 AugustTwitter
Highlighting how he believes that 92-year-old Mugabe “is feeling increasingly cornered” by the mushrooming variety of civic organisations asking for him to stand down, Coltart said he feared a regain in heavy-handed tactics to quash opposition.

Given Mugabe’s “enough is enough” recent comments and past allegations that Zanu-PF had used legal and extra-legal means to crush those who oppose Mugabe, Coltart said he expected that, if Nera demonstrates its determination to have the demonstration on Saturday, “we may see an increasingly hostile response from the regime, including the use of the military and police to prevent the demonstration.”

He explained: “We do know the history of this party and it is one that has been responsible for a genocide in the past and it is increasingly cornered. They said it – that they don’t care what the international community and unfortunately the Southern African Development Community (SADC) has largely turned a blind eye on the regime to respect its own Constitution.”

Police ban hearing in open court

The High Court application filed by Nera, Democratic Restoration Assembly (Dare), Harare resident, Standrick Zvorwadza and the Combined Harare Residents’ Association (CHRA), seeking the nullification of the ban will be heard in an open court on Wednesday (14 September).

The outcome of the hearing “is dependent on the judiciary”, which Mugabe has already threatened, according to Coltart.

“It is dependent on he judge presiding over this matter – who is to be commended for stating that that initial ban was illegal but should have said it was unconstitutional as soon as she heard the police had issued it,” he said.

“Despite the clear reading of the Constitution, it does depend on its interpretation by the judiciary which in the past has either been cowered by Zanu-PF or which has been completely subverted by Zanu-PF. We just don’t know – we remain uncertain about what action the judiciary will take”.

While lawyer Tendai Biti, who filed the legal challenge, said the new ban was shocking, Zanu-PF has supported the ban following violent clashes between police and anti-government protesters last month.

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A Minister’s courageous stance shows education is key

Sunday Argus

By Chris Chivers

September 11 2016

TAXI drivers are usually shrewd judges of reality. Careering around the CBD and well beyond as a priest at St George’s Cathedral I learnt more in the context of minibus taxis about grassroots South African living than I did from most of the church meetings I attended!

On a recent visit to the Mother City it was Uber drivers who provided the latest updates not just of life in Planet Zuma but further afield.

All, bar one in fact, were Zimbabweans. Most from Harare, in their twenties with young families, restarting life in the Western Cape.

To a man they were articulate and impressively measured when discussing the latest from home.

Few could unravel the tripartite factions of both Zanu-PF or the already much-splintered MDC. But most, like citizens the world over, cherished the same human dreams.

Freedom, food, employment, equality, peace and prosperity – but above all, education.

Mugabe has got most things spectacularly wrong. But one thing that for long was the jewel in his crown was the laudable levels of literacy in Zimbabwe. The best in Africa, for years leaving the horrors of South Africa’s now ever-morefailing education-system in the shade.

“The violence disrupted my schooling,” said one. “I want my children to have better schooling than me.”

“On planet Zuma?” – its primary schools sometimes filled with B Coms who think that a degree entitles you to draw a big salary, however bad your teaching is – “I can’t see your children achieving that here,” I gently suggested to several.

“If David Coltart was education minister, it would happen,” said one. “We need a Coltart here,” said another. “He’d get them the textbooks they need, the desks and equipment. And get the teachers going.”

A few years ago I’d actually heard Coltart speak. He was impressive.

A human rights lawyer and parliamentarian for the MDC, Coltart, I knew, had been the driving force behind the exposure of the terrible violence initiated by Zanu- PF against Zapu in the 1980s.

When I heard him, Coltart was busy trying to kick-start an education system in the Unity Government of 2009-2013. Within months, he’d ensured the biggest production and delivery of textbooksany country has probably ever seen in so short a space of time: a staggering 13 million books for primary schools alone.

Over the past week, I’ve been reading Coltart’s The Struggle Continues: Fifty Years of Tyranny in Zimbabwe.

My South African friends tell me that this 600-pager is now on the bestseller list. I’m not surprised.

It is absolutely unputdownable. It’s relentlessly objective. Fact piled upon fact in the way that I suppose a lawyer needs to construct a case. It’s like the longest opening or closing speech at a trial you’ll ever read.

But in its relentlessly unemotional, yet deftly written style, Coltart has produced a masterpiece.

Describing a testament to tyranny as a masterpiece sounds tautological at first. Until you are so gripped by the narrative that you realise that the person being convicted in all this is not only a dictator like Mugabe, or even a political party or three, it’s actually oneself.

Coltart, like the true Christian and humanitarian that he is, through extraordinary honesty about himself and with integrity of a rare degree, confronts each of us with an old truth.

My co-religionists express it sometimes as the question: “Were you there when they crucified my Lord?” For some it will be that famous aphorism “all it takes for evil to flourish is for the good to do nothing” that confronts their apathy.

For others again it will be Martin Niemoller’s dictum that comes to mind: “first they came for the communists and I did not speak out because I was not a communist.”

But whichever of these speaks to our particular circumstances, convicted is what all of us who read Coltart’s searing, disturbing, horrifying yet still hopeful narrative will surely be.

For me the twin questions that hovered over my beach chair was the straightforward “Why didn’t I do more? And what will I do now?”, together with the realisation that those Uber drivers know what the first step must be. For Coltart’s extraordinary and courageous public service reminds all of us of an ancient truth – even dictators in their hearts know this – which is that only educational opportunity can build and will change societies.

• Chris Chivers is principal of Westcott House, Cambridge, canon of the diocese of Saldhana Bay and chairman of USPG, the global Anglican charity.

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Beyond Borders Scotland – Harare Blues – a conversation between Petina Gappah and David Coltart

Beyond Borders Scotland

uTube

28th August 2016

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