Zimbabweans shocked by Tsvangirai cancer

News 24

28th June 2016

Zimbabwean opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai shocked the nation on Monday with the announcement that he has colon cancer

“Get well soon, Save”, “We love you so much” and “I suggest you visit TB Joshua again” – these were some of the online reactions from Zimbabweans to news that Tsvangirai has cancer of the colon.

Save (pronounced Sav-eh) is one of the names Tsvangirai’s supporters call him. Save is a large river in the area that the burly 64-year-old politician comes from in eastern Zimbabwe.

Rumours of Tsvangirai’s ill-health have been growing for a while, fuelled by his no-show at recent MDC events and by confirmation he went for an operation in SA last month.

Officials at the time downplayed the seriousness of his complaint, perhaps because the cancer was only diagnosed when he got to hospital in SA.

The announcement of cancer is “absolutely huge”, according to Zimbabwean journalist @nqabamatshazi.

It’s already inviting comparisons with Mugabe, who’s nearly three decades older than the man who came close to unseating him during elections in 2008. Tsvangirai himself made a barely-disguised dig at the president in his statement, saying – as did former Education Minister David Coltart, who disclosed his own prostate cancer fears last month – that “the health of national leaders, including politicians, should not be a subject of national speculation and uncertainty”.

“Get well soon, true son of the soil”

Mugabe makes frequent trips to Singapore for medical attention, but has never disclosed the true nature of his complaint. Given the frequency and the length of his trips to Singapore, it is hard to believe that he is still suffering from the after-effects of what was said to be a cataract operation in 2014.

While Tsvangirai is being praised for his bravery in disclosing the exact nature of his complaint, he will also inevitably face questions about his ability to maintain the momentum needed to mount what will be a punishing campaign ahead of presidential elections in 2018.

Tsvangirai’s party has always said he will stand again against Mugabe, who at 92 shows no sign of wanting to let another candidate fight the battle.

Tweeted @RangaMberi: “Chemotherapy will slow down even the toughest among us. More power to him.”

Tsvangirai has already begun chemo, according to his statement.

The MDC posted a picture of Tsvangirai with his wife Elizabeth in what looked like a clinic.

For now, though, most Zimbabweans showed their concern for a man who has spent the past 17 years at the helm of the MDC.

As good wishes began to flood the opposition’s Facebook page minutes after the announcement, Tawanda Mudhliwa posted: “Get well soon, true son of the soil.”

Simba Mudzudza wrote: “My prayer is for you to get well soon. The nation at large, their hope is on you. Their happiness is on you. May the Almighty bless you to lead the Zimbabwe republic. l salute you since you started this journey. We are almost there. Don’t give up, Save. Good day, my President.”

Tozivashe Chiweshe said: “Warriors don’t cry. Soldier on, Mr MDC. Zimbos are with you.”

There has been no reaction from Zimbabwean authorities.

Colo-rectal cancer is the third most common cancer in the world. Tsvangirai’s deputy, Thokozani Khuphe, is a cancer survivor herself: she fought breast cancer in 2011 and 2012, receiving treatment in SA. Tsvangirai paid a visit to Nigerian televangelist TB Joshua in 2013.

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Video captures heart-stopping bravery of Zim protester

News24

Correspondent

25th June 2016

Harare – Riot police advance across the tiled foyer of a luxury Harare hotel to where a man in a red shirt is waiting. He has dared them to come.

With a group of brave – some might say foolhardy protesters – he is speaking out against the profligacy of Zimbabwe’s vice president Phelekezela Mphoko, who has stayed in the top-class Rainbow Towers Hotel for more than 550 nights, clocking up a reported bill of at least $300 000 as Zimbabwe sinks further into economic crisis.

“I urge the police officers coming over there to behave like human beings. We have a right to demonstrate, we have a right to petition. We actually are protected by our constitution,” the man says in a video uploaded to YouTube by Alpha Media Holdings.

You cannot watch these scenes because you know exactly what will happen next to this man, unarmed but fierce in his anger.

In a Zimbabwe politically-divided as never before, it is still not okay to criticise one of long-time president Robert Mugabe’s top lieutenants. Especially one rumoured to be close to first lady Grace.

As journalists film on Friday, the riot police, truncheons at the ready, drag the red-shirted man out of the foyer, along the tiled path past the neat green lawns to where a truck is waiting.

He grabs onto an officer’s legs. You cannot bear to look at his face.

The police turn on another protester: A man in a white shirt. They take him by one leg so that he is left uncomfortably hopping along. Behind their desks, hotel staff watch, presumably the same hotel staff who see Mphoko clock in every night with the grandson who shares his $460 per night luxury suite.

He and his wife have turned down several extremely roomy Harare homes on the basis they are not “fitting” for a man of his stature.

Outside, the police truck is idling. The man in the red shirt struggles. Officers try to pin him down. And then – somehow – he falls out of the truck, knocking his head on the ground. With no visible sympathy the police bend over, pick him up by the back of his trousers and put him back on the truck.

There was no clear word on Saturday as to what had happened to the two men or whether they had been released. The red-shirted man has been identified as Stern Zvorwadza, the chair of the National Vendors’ Union of Zimbabwe. The Tajamuka/Sesjikile Campaign said it organised the demonstration.

Five activists were arrested in December during an earlier protest against Mphoko’s stay at the Rainbow Towers. They were released after two nights in custody. But journalist-turned-activist Itai Dzamara, who bravely protested Mugabe’s continued stay in power in early 2015, was abducted 15 months ago. He has not been seen since.

Former education minister David Coltart commented on Twitter: “Remarkable bravery demonstrated by some young people demanding immediate evacuation of VP Mphoko from Rainbow hotel”.

Said Facebook user Kishon Chisahwira on the Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition’s page, which has also shared a video of the incident: “Where are we heading to as a nation? God help us?”

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Anger mounts in Zim after mom is handcuffed in front of kids at police roadblock

News 24

Correspondent

22nd June 2016

Harare – Did overzealous police officers at a checkpoint in Zimbabwe really handcuff a woman in front of her crying children because she objected to being fined over a third number plate sticker?

Apparently they did, if a post by popular Zimbabwe Facebook community WhatsApp Harare is to be believed.

Zimbabwe’s roadblock police, and the fines they extort for a myriad of tiny infractions, are the topic of angry conversations both on and offline every day in the southern African country.

Tourism industry officials are worried the roadblocks will put off self-drive visitors. Even the official Herald newspaper – normally loyal to President Robert Mugabe’s government – publishes articles critical of the roadblocks.

This time traffic cops really appear to have gone over the top.

“OK, enough is enough,” says the post, by a driver who claims a weekend trip from Harare to the popular resort of Kariba was “totally ruined” by the roadblocks.

Angry reactions

“I am incensed by the injustice dealt to this one young woman at a Chinhoyi roadblock,” he continues. “[She and her family] were told that their 3rd number plate on their trailer was ‘defaced’.

“When they argued, the woman police officer became rude and abusive. So much so that their three young daughters in the car began to cry with genuine fear. The mother decided to video the ranting policewoman.”

“Next thing she is handcuffed in front of her screaming children and placed under a tree, while her husband and children are escorted to Chinhoyi police station,” reads the post. The driver says he managed to persuade the police to let him transport the unnamed woman (plus a cop) to the police station. The post has a photo of a young woman in handcuffs outside a car.

Likely because Zimbabweans have had enough of daily extortion by traffic police, the story has been widely-shared, including by former education minister David Coltart.

The post is provoking angry reactions, both on the WhatsApp Harare page it was first posted to on Tuesday, and on other pages.

Wrote FB user Mildred Nyasha Mugauri Chigorimbo: “That officer should be answerable, if she can be identified from the video. This is inhumane, cruel and disgusting. No wonder the community has no respect for them, because they haven’t earned it and DO NOT deserve it.”

Fine for a dirty car

User Micky Beverley wrote: “I think they will not be paid their wages this month – that’s why they are desperately trying to get money for any reason possible.”

Fidelis Tawanda Moyo said: “I was stopped exactly 20 times from Harare to Byo [Bulawayo]. 20 roadblocks or should I say fund raising booths.”

According to a state media report in November, the police do not hand over all the fine money to treasury, “but retain some of it for internal use”.

Last month, a driver from the southern city of Masvingo was sentenced to 10 years in jail after he sped off from a roadblock. A traffic cop hung onto his bonnet, but fell off and was injured.

The state-owned Chronicle reported on Wednesday that a Beitbridge police officer had been arrested for stealing R1.1m over a six-month period by only pretending to deposit “his employer’s money” in the bank. It was not immediately clear if the money had been collected at roadblocks.

Police may try to fine you for having a “dirty car”, having the wrong kind of honeycomb reflective tape and for not having proof your portable fire extinguisher has been recently serviced.

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Coltart’s book: New thinking about Pan-Africanism!

Financial Gazette

By Ken Mufuka

16th June 2016

DAVID Coltart is best known for his participation in the exposé of Gukurahundi atro-cities in 1991 in Matabeleland.

Though the Roman Catholic, through its Peace and Justice Commission had compiled damning reports, starting in 1983 culminating in a summary of the atrocities in 1987, the hierarchy sat on the report, praying that the events described therein were merely a bad dream, and that in due course, they would disappear.

Archbishop Patrick Chakaipa, a longtime friend of President Robert Mugabe, despite his many gifts, only achieved a princely place in the church because the liberation war had driven white priests out of the country. He therefore, had a feeling that the white establishment would exaggerate the missteps of any African leadership, whether political or religious.

He was reluctant to expose Gukurahundi atrocities for these two reasons. Coltart can be credited with Breaking the Silence, the name of the Gukurahundi exposé. Coltart is Rhodesian-born, served in the British South Africa Police, went to college in South Africa, and during those years adopted the black cause. His history on behalf of civil rights is beyond dispute.

His book, 50 Years of Dictatorship, is an eye witness account of the events in both Rhodesia and Zimbabwe during that period.

Vice President Emmerson Mnangagwa is annoyed for the reason that the book mentions him as a provocateur during the Gukurahundi atrocities. Many foolish things were said during that period. ZANU leadership adopted a false Marxist ideology, were cocky, and the whole world lay at their feet in adoration. They could do no wrong. Judith Todd was raped for daring to inform the High Command of the atrocities.

I was a witness of these events as well. Because of my experience in Jamaica, I knew that no good would come out of it. I said my piece and went into voluntary exile.
Rather than deny the truth, it is better to adopt a humble position, accept the insouciance of youthfulness, and pledge to make amends. The archives are full of the foolish statements made by the ZANU leadership at the time. Joshua Nkomo was likened to a snake, and that the head of a snake must be crushed.

Archival evidence now suggests that the atrocities were probably pre-planned, well before independence, and that a compact with South African regime was reached for the purpose.

Brother Jonathan Moyo is acknowledged by my esteemed Brother George Ayiteyi as an intellectual prostitute. He too objects to Coltart’s rendition and perspective of history. Since Moyo is a paid hatchet man, we do not need tarry on his case, any longer. He sings for his lunch.

Brother George Charamba is a different kind of fish, because he presumes to speak for the powers-that-be. His objections to Coltart’s book are as follows.

Coltart, being white, cannot write a fair history of Zimbabwe. Underneath it all, white liberals, and Charamba make a list, Terence Ranger, Dorris Lessing, L.H. Gann, and others, are at heart imperialists. Once the issue of land (occupation) was raised, on which white economic power was based, they abandoned the liberal ship and showed where their bread was buttered.

Charamba raises an important point. Let me address this issue in another way. This Pan African ideology further argues that there is no white man free from prejudice. Even Christian missionaries are tainted. And that is Chakaipa’s point. They will exaggerate black inefficiencies and corrupt practices in order to maintain some moral superiority.

The fact that Coltart is white does not negate his experience. Precisely because white domination was a fact of life, a perspective from a white angle helps explain that reality. Now, more than ever, after black oppression became a reality, it behooves us to understand white premonitions of that reality. But even more important, independence has taught us that a black devil is no better than a white devil, perhaps even worse, due to lack of restraints.

Further, Coltart has said nothing new. That Coltart has said nothing new misses the point completely. Chronicles are not necessarily written for the generation that was witness to the atrocities, but lest the next generation should forget. That is why Jews remind their children about the holocaust, lest they forget.

I surmise that Coltart has introduced an argument first brought to our attention by our white Sister Judy Todd. To what purpose was the violence leashed by Murambatsvina? Neither the 150 000 families nor the oppressors benefitted anything.

These issues have bothered me for the last 20 years, and following Coltart’s and Todd’s works, I have laboured in the vineyard also. The only answer I can find is that somewhere during the liberation struggle, the stalwarts lost a sense of righteousness. Right is that which is inherently good and universally valid. Coltart need not feel uncomfortable for being white and challenging activities that were inherently evil.Surely, their whiteness does not exclude him from stumbling upon perpetual truth.

My political consciousness was first provoked by Dorris Lessing’s book, Burning Grass, when I was 13. I have since visited Chikanga’s country, and Odzi Country Club where the district commissioner hatched a plot to remove Chikanga’s people from their land. Chief Chikanga had not stepped out of a path to let a 12-year-old white girl pass.
Coltart, Todd and Lessing have established, and this is the narrative of the book, 50 Years of Dictatorship, that oppression has no colour. I go further than Coltart. Black oppression benefits no one, even the chefs who return to pauperism the moment they leave office. It makes no sense whatsoever.

mufukaken@gmail.com

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Mugabe’s death, Zimbabwe politicians ready themselves

Daily Maverick

By Dr Stuart Doran

13th June 2016

To the casual observer, nothing much seems to have happened in Zimbabwe in recent years: Robert Mugabe, the world’s oldest head of state, remains president and Zanu-PF is still the ruling party more than 35 years after it took power.

But there has, in fact, been a tectonic shift. Like Zimbabwean society itself the opposition has become deeply fractured and any meaningful cooperation between the multitude of opposition parties seems unlikely. Moreover, this fragmentation has affected Zanu-PF itself – and that’s a big deal.

Of course, the party has always been riven by factions but much of what has made Mugabe so successful has been his uncanny ability to manage these conflicts and turn them to his advantage.

A sense of balance has been key. Internal opponents and troublemakers were isolated and, where necessary, excommunicated or worse. Others were rewarded for their loyalty. In doing so, Mugabe has for nearly 40 years managed to prevent schisms from becoming wide enough to threaten the party.

That has now changed. Over the past 18 months, an unprecedented purge has effectively demolished this delicately balanced edifice. Most conspicuously, former vice-president Joice Mujuru and many of her allies were expelled from the party in 2015.

Mugabe is 92, and with elections on the horizon, Zimbabwe’s political atmosphere is becoming increasingly turbulent as a miscellany of groups and individuals compete for the right to take over when Mugabe dies, or is no longer capable of running the show.

Inconvenient truths

A driving force behind the new ructions in the party is the first lady, Grace Mugabe. Since the ousting of Mujuru, Grace and her faction have antagonised and provoked ambitious groupings around vice-president Emmerson Mnangagwa and various security services chiefs. Many fear that violence will erupt when Mugabe dies.

Meanwhile, Mujuru and other former Zanu-PF members have joined the unfamiliar ranks of the opposition. Many people, both inside and outside the country, see Mujuru’s newly announced party, Zimbabwe People First (ZimPF), as the potential leader of a coalition capable of garnering enough support to win elections, due to be held in 2018. That’s assuming agreement can be reached between opposition groups.

However, Mujuru – like Mnangagwa and others who are trying to reinvent themselves – faces significant problems. Awkward questions have arisen about their involvement in an event that many former Zanu-PF members would prefer everyone forgot.

That event is the Gukurahundi, when thousands of Ndebele speakers were killed by the army’s fifth brigade between 1983 and 1984. The pretext for these massacres was the emergence of a “dissident” or bandit problem in Matabeleland, which the government alleged to be orchestrated by the rival political party, Zapu, under Joshua Nkomo.

Mnangagwa, who is vying for the presidency, recently denied a statement he is said to have made in 1983, quoted in a book by lawyer David Coltart. In it he allegedly threatened to burn down “all villages infested with dissidents” and asserted that the campaign against dissidents could only succeed if the infrastructure that nurtured them was destroyed.

Coltart pointed out that he had done nothing more than cite a contemporary account from 1983 in the state-run Chronicle newspaper.

Such statements were regularly issued by Zanu ministers in that period and enthusiastically reported by the state-owned media. Mugabe, for example, said in April 1983 that “communities which sympathised with dissidents must not be shocked when the government viewed them as enemies of peace as much as the dissidents themselves. Communities which helped dissidents must not be surprised if they were punished as severely as the dissidents.”

Discomfort over the Gukurahundi massacres is not confined to the Mnangagwa faction. A prominent defector to Mujuru’s ZimPF is retired brigadier-general Agrippah Mutambara, who was in 2007 accused by Judith Todd, the daughter of a former Rhodesian prime minister, of rape.

In her memoir, she claimed Mutambara assaulted her after she approached the government with evidence of the fifth brigade atrocities, and was instructed to liaise with him by Solomon Mujuru, then chief of the army and Joice Mujuru’s late husband.

Mutumbara has never responded to these allegations, but the bad news for Mujuru is that such exposure is set to increase rather than decrease with time. This claim, like that involving Mnangagwa, has long been a matter of public knowledge, but a great deal of new information is due to emerge as Mugabe’s end draws nearer.

Archives in Britain, Australia and America, which are a treasure trove of formerly classified information on Zimbabwean events during the 1980s, are also progressively disgorging masses of documents which will make for uncomfortable reading for those who were politically active in that period.

History of violence

The threat posed by such inconvenient truths is well illustrated by the case of Didymus Mutasa, a long-time confidant of Mugabe who left the party with Mujuru and who is a high-profile founding member of ZimPF.

Mutasa’s latter-day conversion to democracy has come under fire from Jestina Mukoko, an activist who was abducted and tortured by government agents in 2008 when Mutasa was minister of state security.

Mukoko has since taken Mutasa to court, declaring that “it does not change anything that he is no longer with Zanu-PF and he is now with People First; he is still Didymus Mutasa … The message to Zimbabwe is that as Zimbabweans, we need to hold people to account. People need to be responsible for their actions”.

In March, Mutasa responded to Mukoko’s calls for him to expose the men who attacked her, telling the Zimbabwean Daily News site that he was unable to name them due to the Official Secrets Act.

Either way, Mutasa and others like him will have to become more accustomed to the prospect of legal action – and the humiliation it can bring.

Where next?

Where does all this leave Mujuru? In an attempt to present her party as something more than stale broth that’s has been reheated, she has mentioned the need for a national truth-telling exercise, similar to Desmond Tutu’s truth and reconciliation commission. Yet, for many, a yawning credibility gap is likely to widen for as long as she remains silent about the histories of those in her own ranks.

Mujuru herself has been implicated in the Gukurahundi by diplomatic documents. An Australian cable released last year recounts a conversation with Eddison Zvobgo, a member of Zanu’s central committee, at the height of the killings in 1983.

Zvobgo spoke of a “decision of the central committee that there had to be a ‘massacre’ of Ndebeles”. Before the inception of the politburo in 1984, the 20-member central committee was the party’s peak policymaking body – and Mujuru was a member of it, as were Mnangagwa and Mutasa. In other words, the trio – all of whom seek power in a post-Mugabe dispensation – are said to have participated in a formal decision to launch the Gukurahundi.

Mujuru is yet to react to this disclosure. An honest account of what she saw, heard – and did (or failed to do) – during the Gukurahundi and other periods of abuse would win her the support of many Zimbabweans who yearn for real reform. On the other hand, such a move could alienate a large constituency within her fledgling party.

But the risks of inaction are also significant. Sooner rather than later, Mujuru will have to choose whether she will be a leader or a political operator; whether she will lead a movement or just another of Zimbabwe’s opposition parties.

Her dilemma is, in a sense, that of the nation itself. Mugabe’s death will lead to either regression, continued stagnation or some form of genuine change. Given the backdrop – which makes for an “operating system” riddled with malware – options one or two seem most likely.

At the same time, history is about human beings and the choices we make. That is why Zimbabweans, despite the crushing disappointments of the post-independence period, keep hoping against hope that change will come.

————–
A version of this article first appeared on the Daily Maverick

Dr Stuart Doran is the author of a forthcoming book on the 1980s killings in Zimbabwe – Kingdom, power, glory: Mugabe, Zanu and the quest for supremacy, 1960–87

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David Coltart under goes biopsy cancer tests in SA

Bulawayo 24

By Stephen Jakes

6th June 2016

The MDC- secretary for legal affairs David Coltart has said he under went biopsy tests in South Africa to check if he has developed prostate cancer.

He said it was important for the public figures to make their health status public saying the situation surrounding P5resident Robert Mugabe’s health left [people with no0 option but to guess about his condition because all was kept secret.

“I have always believed that public figures do, by virtue of the position they have sought in society, lose some of their privacy when it comes to their finances, relationships and health. That is not to say they lose all their rights but there is a need to keep the public informed on aspects which concern them, such as the physical ability of a politician to continue to hold office,” Coltart said.

“In Zimbabwe that has been a particularly acute problem with all the speculation which flies around Robert Mugabe’s health. Much of that speculation could have been tempered through regular, accurate , short, health reports.”

He said in that spirit he need to update friends and colleagues regarding his own recent health issues.

“As many men do when they turn 50, I have kept a check on my prostrate by having regular blood tests which result in PSA numbers. If your number gets too high that is a possible indicator of prostate cancer and biopsies are done to check,” he said.

“Recently my PSA increased to a level which my Zimbabwean doctor thought needed more investigation . One of South Africa’ s top urologists was seen and he too recommended a biopsy, which I had last week. Fortunately the biopsy found no cancer, but unfortunately an infection resulted which has necessitated my hospitalization in Johannesburg to clear up the infection.”

“So I am rather weak and poorly at present but pray the good Lord brings me back to full health. I would obviously appreciate your prayers. God bless Zimbabwe,” he added.

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Thousands take part in pro-Mugabe march

Business Day Live

By Ray Ndlovu

25th May 2016

THOUSANDS of backers of Zimbabwe’s ruling party marched in the capital on Wednesday in support of President Robert Mugabe.

“This is a special event by our dynamic youth league in support of our icon,” Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front spokesman Simon Khaya Moyo said. “The theme of the march is solidarity with the visionary and iconic leadership of our glorious party under President Mugabe.”

Zanu (PF)’s youth league staged the march in Harare on Wednesday to coincide with Africa Day celebrations, with President Robert Mugabe insisting he would stay on as leader despite calls for him to step down.

The march, dubbed the “million-man march”, was named partly due to the 100,000 people in attendance drawn from each of the party’s 10 provinces, and was meant to show support for Mugabe’s rule.

Party supporters, bused into the capital Harare from the country’s 10 provinces, were gathering at assembly points on Wednesday to march to Robert Mugabe Square, near the party headquarters, west of the city centre.

“We know that there’s a lot of negative publicity spread by private media and the West, to the extent that our grassroots supporters are now confused, so this march is to restore confidence,” Zanu-PF Youth League Deputy Secretary Kudzi Chipanga said late Tuesday by phone.

Chipanga used the march to criticise government ministers for corruption and inefficiency.

“Government officials and executives in the corporate sector are hardly ever in their offices. We don’t see them, and their lifestyles don’t match their incomes,” he said in a speech near the ruling party’s headquarters. Ministers seemed to “be competing” to change their cars faster than their shoes, he said.

Mr Mugabe returned from Singapore on Tuesday night with his wife Grace and their daughter Bona Mugabe-Chikore who recently gave birth in that country to a baby boy.

Flanked by his wife, Mugabe said the march was “a great revolutionary act” and had been well organised by the youth league.

“I would like to thank the youth league of Zanu (PF) for this great revolutionary act. It was run and organised by them and with the support of women…they championed it right through, they travelled…and organised the people for this march, indeed they were determined it would succeed,” he said.

No difference

“It won’t make any difference,” David Coltart, a former opposition education minister, senator and human rights lawyer said in a phone interview from Zimbabwe’s second city, Bulawayo, on Wednesday. “People will still wake up on Friday hungry and jobless.”

Jonas Nyaungwa, who sells tomatoes and kale to passers-by in the capital’s sprawling Mbare Market, said the march was a farce.

“I’ve been forced to close my stall for the day and take part. It’s ridiculous, but I dare not argue, even though the march is for what?” Nyaungwa said. “For nothing, because nothing will change. It’s just a demonstration of power.”

Challenges

In power since 1980, Mugabe’s rule is facing increasing challenges. These include worsening factional fights in Zanu (PF) not least due to Mugabe’s advanced age, dissent from the war veterans group and a struggling economy which has thrown off the rails the promises he made in 2013 of economic prosperity.

In two months’ time the central bank is set to introduce so-called “bond notes” — equivalent to a local currency — a measure meant to deal with the severe liquidity crisis in the US dollar-dominated economy, which has seen Mugabe’s administration failing to pay its 500,000 public servants on time.

The country’s largest opposition party, the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) led by Morgan Tsvangirai, has exploited the growing pressures to demand for Mugabe to step down. It is also rolling out nationwide demonstrations of its own to force him to leave office.

An MDC legislator, James Maridadi, is at the forefront of pushing for the impeachment of the 92-year-old from office. “The fact that impeachment of a sitting Head of State is provided for in the Constitution means that it can be done within the provisions outlined therein. I should hasten to say impeaching a sitting Head of State is not a declaration of war, but a constitutional and polite way of asking that we be given an opportunity to elect someone else to that office,” he said.

In his unscripted speech Mugabe dared the MDC on where they wanted him to go, saying he was an elected official who won the 2013 elections.

“They say Mr Mugabe must go, he must go to where? I am not a British, neither am I a Yankee. That is why I told Tony Blair to keep his England and I would keep my Zimbabwe. Why would they want me to retire? Is it out of pity that the MDC wants me to retire? Tell the papers that Mugabe says you must go hang, hang yourself. I feel it is a disservice to the people to retire for as long as I can do my best, but when time comes I will go,” he said.

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Under-fire Mugabe party staging Zimbabwe ‘Million Man March’ to support 92-year-old ‘icon’

Bloomberg News

By Brian Latham Chengetai Zvauya Godfrey Marawanyika

25th May 2016

THOUSANDS of backers of Zimbabwe’s ruling party will march in the capital on Wednesday in support of President Robert Mugabe, spokesman Simon Khaya Moyo said.

“This is a special event by our dynamic youth league in support of our icon,” the Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front’s Moyo said by phone. “The theme of the march is solidarity with the visionary and iconic leadership of our glorious party under President Mugabe.”

Party supporters, bused into the capital, Harare, from the country’s 10 provinces, are gathering at assembly points to march to Robert Mugabe Square, near the party headquarters, west of the city center.

The so-called million-man march follows a large protest against corruption and poverty held by the opposition Movement for Democratic Change on April 14. It falls on the annual Africa Day holiday and comes amid increased criticism of Zimbabwe’s government for failing to resuscitate an ailing economy marked by company closures, an unemployment rate of as much as 90 percent and persistent cash shortages. Mugabe, 92, has ruled the country since independence from the U.K. in 1980.

‘Restore Confidence’

“We know that there’s a lot of negative publicity spread by private media and the West, to the extent that our grassroots supporters are now confused, so this march is to restore confidence,” Zanu-PF Youth League Deputy Secretary Kudzi Chipanga said late Tuesday by phone.

“It won’t make any difference. People will still wake up on Friday hungry and jobless,” David Coltart, a former opposition education minister, senator and human rights lawyer said in a phone interview from Zimbabwe’s second city, Bulawayo, on Wednesday.

Jonas Nyaungwa, who sells tomatoes and kale to passers-by in the capital’s sprawling Mbare Market, said the march was a farce.

“I’ve been forced to close my stall for the day and take part. It’s ridiculous, but I dare not argue even though the march is for what?” Nyaungwa said. “For nothing, because nothing will change. It’s just a demonstration of power.

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Should military be involved in business?

Zimbabwe Independent

By Herbert Moyo

20th May 2016

ZIMBABWEANS are unlikely to be rubbing their hands in anticipation of tangible benefits accruing to Treasury after last week’s announcement by Mines Minister Walter Chidhakwa that the military will be partnering a South African mining company in a chrome smelting project in Kwekwe.

According to Chidhakwa, the Ministry of Defence entered into a joint venture with Africa Chrome Fields (ACF), a subsidiary of South African mining company Fanshawe Mining Holdings for an exothermic chrome smelting project.

“I am happy with the joint venture between ACF and Ministry of Defence,” Chidhakwa said during the tour of 10 chrome smelting plants which was also attended by Vice-President Emmerson Mnangagwa and Defence Minister Sydney Sekeramayi.

“Sekeramayi is here representing the establishment. I know you are used to protecting the country, but now you will be protecting the resources,” he said.

Mnangagwa said the plant would produce ultra-low carbon ferrochrome in 45 seconds. He said the plant would produce 20 000 tonnes of ultra-low carbon ferrochrome a month. Other touted benefits would be the fact the new technology which does not require electricity will be used while 3 000 jobs will be created. This sounds well and good, but then again it is not the first time Zimbabweans have been promised heaven on earth after the military ventured into mining and other business ventures.

Just last week, the Zimbabwe Independent reported that Chinese diamond mining company Anjin Investments, in which the military has an interest, exported under shady circumstances more than three million carats of diamonds from Chiadzwa to China’s financial hub, Shanghai.

The reports vindicated former Finance minister Tendai Biti who spent the better part of his tenure from 2009-2013 bemoaning the veil of secrecy in Anjin’s operations and its failure to make meaningful remittances to Treasury.

Given this background, this latest military foray into mining and related business ventures poses more questions than answers as was the case with other army projects like the platinum mining project in Darwendale, Mashonaland West and the methane gas exploitation project in Lupane, Matabeleland North.

The sad reality is that it is unlikely that the latest venture will be any different. As analysts point out, such business ventures should be left to the relevant ministries and institutions for the country to stand any chances of realising any benefits.

Lawyer David Coltart said while it was not necessarily illegal, the military’s involvement in such business activities posed serious ethical issues.

“It poses serious problems. How would you deal with the military in the event that they are in breach of contract? They should stick to their core business as is the case with the military in most democracies,” Coltart said.
According to Rhodes University Senior Political and International Studies lecturer, Gwinyayi Dzinesa, military involvement in business (also known as “Milbus”), picked up in earnest in the 1990s after the end of the Cold War as a “means to appease the military and coup-proof liberalising governments such as those of Russia, China, Brazil, Pakistan and Egypt.”

“Saddled with substantial cuts in public expenditure, including military spending, allowing the military to create business enterprises compensated for their financial losses and helped avoid officers’ mutinies.”

Dzinesa said that Zimbabwe’s inclination towards expanding the phenomenon of military business may be designed to protect regime security and ensure political hegemony. “The politico-military-business complex can create a kingmaker caste that will spare no effort to secure the patron regime’s security,” he said.

Dzinesa, who is a former security analyst at the Institute of Security Studies, could well be right given the background of the close links between the Zanu PF government and the military that has propped up President Robert Mugabe from the challenge posed by MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai since 2000. The military was heavily implicated in political intimidation and violence that ensured Mugabe returned to power in the violent June 2008 presidential election run-off which was boycotted by Tsvangirai who had won the first round in March.

Since 2002 when the late Defence Forces commander General Vitalis Zvinavashe, who was involved in the business of supplying the army during the Congo war — a conflict of interest — made the infamous speech about the presidency being a straitjacket reserved for those who participated in the liberation struggle, the military has been vociferous in its partisan support Mugabe and Zanu PF. The army’s unfettered access to mineral resources and other business ventures could therefore be seen in the context of rewards and patronage to keep them on the side of the political establishment. However, as Dzinesa noted, the government could “inadvertently create a frankestein monster in the form of commercially viable and independent military that could ultimately challenge it.”

Dzinesa said that Chidhakwa’s remarks that the entry of the military into the smelting sector was necessary to protect the country’s resources should be seen in the context of government walking the talk about “indigenisation of the economy as well as “value addition and beneficiation.”

“The military will serve to provide reassurance about what are perceived to be national interests that is, the protection and beneficiation of the country’s mineral resources,” said Dzinesa adding that, “Milbus could therefore not only provide essential services, but also generate employment and revenue and contribute to national development.”

However, as shown by the Anjin case, there is little evidence to support this theory as ordinary Zimbabweans have benefitted little from the military exploitation of the country’s diamonds.

“The downside (of the military involvement) is the dark areas of illegitimacy and secrecy in the world of ‘Milbus’, and Zimbabwe is no exception. In most countries, unlike corporate entities, military owned business enterprises are not subjected to public or any other scrutiny, including by the parliament or civilian government auditing agencies, or civilian courts,” Dzinesa said.

Another analyst Farai Maguwu, the director of the Centre for Natural Resource Governance, said the country is unlikely to realise any meaningful benefits from this latest venture.

“It will be another harvest of thorns just as we saw in Chiadzwa. There will be no-one to hold the military to account and this venture will operate outside the confines of the law,” Maguwu said on Tuesday.

He said the army should focus on projects related to its core business such as manufacturing weapons rather than encroaching into mining which should be left to the relevant ministries, institutions and companies.

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Mnangagwa was apologise first for Gukurahundi

Daily News

17 May 2016

By Jeffrey Muvundusi

It will be prudent for Vice President Emmerson Mnangagwa to issue a public apology on his role during the Gukurahundi atrocities if he truly aspires to be the next president of Zimbabwe, ex-Education minister David Coltart has said.

Responding to a question on the VP’s suitability for presidency given his alleged involvement in the 80s atrocities that claimed over 20 000 lives according to rights groups, Coltart said while it was clear that Mnangagwa had not acted as an individual but as part of the government at that time, his clear ambitions for the highest office made it explicitly necessary to come clean on his role.

Apparently advising Mnangagwa to take a cue from him. Coltart a former member of the racist and brutal Rhodesian police. said as soon as he was voted into a public office in 2000, he renounced his past.

In his recently published book. The Struggle Continues: 50 Years of Tyranny in Zimbabwe, Coltart claims that Mnangagwa, then Security minister, made inflammatory remarks at the height of the Gukurahundi atrocities, which the VP refuted as false.

Mnangagwa subsequently threatened to sue Coltart.

“Should he (Mnangagwa) be condemned indefinitely for saying those words in 1983? Obviously not”: Coltart said. “If I stand here and say I should have a political future despite the fact that I fought for the Rhodesians, then clearly the vice president should have the ability to stand to be president as well, in respect of what he has done, but the critical thing is this, have I turned my back on the Rhodesian era or do I seek to perpetuate those policies today?” Coltart told journalists at the Bulawayo Press Club.

“I publicly renounced that time.”

“Through this book, and elsewhere, I publicly accepted my role in it and on that basis, I want to look forward and that is what I think … Mnangagwa needs to do.”

The rights lawyer said Mnangagwa should be at ease and walk the nation through his journey during the widely-condemned atrocities as Zimbabweans were incredible natural forgivers.

“He (Mnangagwa) played a role whether any of us like it or not in that very troubled chapter of our history. He played an active role. I think if he wants to seek high office, he has got to come public about his role and apologise for whatever the role he played was.

“The only thing that singles him out is if he wishes to stand for national office, if he wants to stand for the highest office in the land.

“There are high expectations of any person who seeks public office and that relates to me as well,” he said.

“Certainly, the experience that I have had as a white Zimbabwean is that Zimbabweans share an incredible capacity for forgiveness, an incredible capacity to shut the door and move on,” he said.

“I think all our current actors not just … Mnangagwa will experience that if they do that and then, ironically they will shore up their positioning for national office or office of that nature.”

Coltart further noted that pretending as if nothing happened during that sad chapter of the Zimbabwean history by anyone who wants to hold the highest office makes one unsuitable.

“But the real danger is that if we simply seek to pretend as if nothing happened and, even worse than that, if we employ language and engage in conduct which perpetuates those practices, then people like that are not fit for office,” Coltart said.

He was however, quick to point out that the atrocities cannot be blamed on Mnangagwa alone.

“It was a collective decision and it is to those individuals to learn from those mistakes and move on,” Coltart said.

He added: “Even when I write about Gukurahundi in my book, I write about super Zapu and the destabilising influence of South Africa which exacerbated the situation in Matabeleland,” he said.

“This is part of our history, part of the objective facts of our history. None of us, including those who are critical of Zanu Pfs responsibility for Gukurahundi can ignore this, if we are honest.”

Coltart who was conscripted in the Rhodesian police when he was 17 and left when he was almost 20, however, said it would be unfair of anyone to judge him on the basis of what he did as a young man. He said rather judge him for his later life, in which he has been fighting for justice and equality for all.

“There are things that I did then that I would not do now with a wisdom I have with a benefit of hindsight. I am not proud of that, so please never judge me for decisions I took as a teenager.”

In reference to the vicious criticism of his book in the State media, accusing him of attempting to whitewash history and hiding the sins he committed when he was in the Rhodesian police, Coltart accused his critics of being dishonest and hypocritical.

Coltart emphasised that his book is an autobiography and thus has his personal perspective on the history of the country, adding that everything he had written was factual and could be independently verified.

‘We need to understand that if our nation is going to be a vibrant modern State there cannot be a one dimensional view of our history; we need to have a multi-sectoral view and get the truth from all perspectives and learn from it and move on” he said.

He also challenged his major critics, Higher Education minister Jonathan Moyo and shadowy State media columnist Nathaniel Manheru, to write their own books rather than spend time criticising him.

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