Tsvangirai’s list of former lieutenants continues to grow

The Chronicle

By Clemence Manyukwe

13th June 2014

MDC-T leader Morgan Tsvangirai is counting his losses as the list of former lieutenants that are deserting him continues to grow.

Since the party’s formation in 1999, he has been losing political friends at a higher rate than he could replace.

The most recent pronounced blow was his fallout with party secretary general Tendai Biti, who together with a sizeable number of senior party members such as Elton Mangoma are now leading a breakaway faction seeking leadership renewal.

Their differences have snowballed into parliament where some legislators no longer pay their allegiance to him, further shrinking the party’s influence in the legislative assembly.

Welshman Ncube, Priscilla Misihairabwi-Mushonga, David Coltart and others gave the MDC-T leader a wide berth way back in 2005 and efforts to bring them back under his “big tent” theory seem dead in the water.

The party’s treasurer-general Roy Bennett has long ceased raising funds for the party whose finances are reportedly in a precarious state as donors and western embassies desert him.

The majority of non-governmental organisations appear to be taking a similar stand.

Even traditional backers like the Commercial Farmers Union and Raymond Majongwe’s Progressive Teachers Union of Zimbabwe have publicly criticised his leadership.

There are those like former Deputy Prime Minister Arthur Mutambara, who once referred to Tsvangirai as a hero upon entering Zimbabwean politics in 2006, only to leave government last year saying he was a weak and indecisive leader.

But the biggest question is: How does a man, who aspires to lead a country squander all the goodwill previously shown to him by friends and backers alike in such a short political space?

Political analyst Ricky Mukonza yesterday said there is no doubt that Tsvangirai’s support base has been shrinking. “There is no doubt that although Tsvangirai is still the most popular figure in opposition politics, his support base has been dwindling. What may be contested is the numbers that he has lost. One needs to look at the following developments to realise that MT has lost: one: the transformation of the NCA into a political party; two: the manifestation of the renewal faction in the MDC,” said Mukonza.

“In addition, scandals have continued to dent Morgan’s standing as an alternative leader. The question that should also be asked is whether Tsvangirai’s party/faction in its current state is able to attract new voters or those on the fence. The answer to this could be a ‘no.'”

Political analyst Rashweat Mukundu said some of the senior members that Tsvangirai has alienated have people who back them, and are most surely likely to shift their allegiance and support from Tsvangirai, further reducing his support base.

Mukundu said the MDC-T is also not engendering confidence as an alternative party through what citizens may see as its leader’s undemocratic actions.

“Morgan Tsvangirai appears to have run full course and not in a position to strategise on the way forward after July 31. A party that has no strategic vision tends to turn internal rather than focus on the core business of winning power,” said Mukundu.

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“Coltart’s attempt to distort history”

“The Patriot” (ZANU PF’s propaganda paper)

By Mashingaidze Gomo

12th June 2014

DAVID Coltart’s Sunday Mail tribute to the late national hero, Dr Nathan Shamuyarira, is a curious piece of writing by a desperate Rhodesian haunted by a past that has turned into an indelible moral stain on his self-righteous whiteness. For the reader who makes cursory readings of these things, it would appear like normal human sentiment, but, coming from a former member of the Rhodesian security forces, it resolves into a narcissist tribute to himself and not the deceased. The tribute becomes a story about himself; how he was about to become chairman of the University of Cape Town’s Zimbabwe Society; how given Mugabe’s desire for reconciliation he was doing all he could to encourage Zimbabwean students to return home after their studies; how he made Mugabe’s telegram into posters they plastered throughout campus in a supposed ‘bitter struggle against apartheid’. Defining his motivation, the former member of racist Rhodesia’s security forces says: ‘If there was hope for Zimbabweans, then there was hope for South Africans too.’

However, it is his final word that executes the conceited coup de tat. ‘This was all made possible by the preparedness of Minister Shamuyarira to meet DERRICK FINE and ME in the first place.’
That is how the former defender of exclusive white privilege in Rhodesia surreptitiously attempts to eclipse and take the shine of Zimbabwe’s liberation struggle from both Prime Minister Mugabe and Minister Shamuyarira.
The Rhodesian actually has the cheek to hinge the future of Zimbabwe and the end of apartheid on ‘the preparedness of Minister Shamuyarira to meet DERRICK FINE and ME (DAVID COLTART)’!
But, the trick is a familiar trend in the history Europeans write about black people’s struggles.

Those responsible for the grossest crimes against black humanity always re-cast themselves as the champions of the liberation of their victims. Abraham Lincoln and William Wilberforce were both slave merchants who went down in the history written by the beneficiaries of the crime against humanity as the champions of its abolition. As if their black victims were willing accomplices in their own genocide.
The European beneficiaries of slavery recorded nothing on the slaves who escaped or died resisting servitude.

And, centuries later, documentaries on Nelson Mandela always end up being the stories of the white people who purportedly helped him, and the same applies to Steve Biko.

And, at the close of the last century, the world witnessed how Mandela was coupled with the apartheid thug, de Klerk, as recipients of the Nobel Peace Prize for fighting against the heinous crime of apartheid.
The centre-piece of David Coltart’s self re-invention is the telegram he received from Prime Minister Robert Mugabe which, incidentally, is a document that is critical in the history of Zimbabwe’s liberation struggle.
It is a historic testimony of President Mugabe’s tolerance and commitment to the principle of reconciliation which, incidentally, European colonials have always held in contempt with respect to their black victims.

In the Sunday Mail ‘tribute’ to Shamuyarira, Coltart talks about how Prime Minister Robert Mugabe was briefed on the Rhodesian’s pro-Zimbabwe activities at the University of Cape Town and, on August 19 1981, decided to send a telegram stating:

Dear Mr Coltart,

I am happy and encouraged to learn that Zimbabwean students at Cape Town University are ready and willing to return home upon completion of their studies to serve their country.

As you are no doubt aware, we in government intend to establish a non-racial society based on equality – and the promotion of the well-being of all our people in accordance with our socialist principles.

It is in this connection that we have adopted the policy of reconciliation whereby our people must put aside the hatreds and animosities of the past and approach the future in a positive and constructive frame of mind and with commitment and dedication to the all-round development of the new Zimbabwe.

As we struggle to re-build our country out of the destruction of war we look to young people like your-selves to assist us to achieve our objective of establishing a prosperous and harmonious and humane society in this country.

I call on all of you who have completed your studies to return and join us in the urgent tasks before us. I hardly need to remind you that this is as much your home as it is ours. As so often has been said, in identifying with a returning to the new Zimbabwe you have nothing to fear but fear itself.

Yours sincerely
R.G. Mugabe
Prime Minister of the Republic of Zimbabwe

This is the Rhodesian’s version of the document and it is clearly intended to redeem him and elevate his moral status to that of his victorious ‘earstwhile’ adversaries. In this version, Coltart is the champion of human rights who is indispensably critical to the success of Mugabe’s reconciliation policy. But, this is sadly not the correct version of the telegram.

Coltart’s Sunday Mail version has a critical omission in its salutation. Prime Minister Mugabe never initiated contact with the Rhodesian. The telegram Comrade Mugabe sent Coltart was A REPLY to one the attention-seeking Rhodesian had sent him.

And, it is not only pathetic, but outrageous just how far the Rhodesian is prepared to go to make himself relevant to a cause he has twice failed to defeat. The original version of the telegram which The Patriot possesses and which the Rhodesian once published on the internet starts as:

Dear Mr Coltart,

Replying to your message of the 17th August – for which many thanks, I am happy and encouraged to learn that Zimbabwean students at Cape Town University are ready and willing to return home upon completion of their studies to serve their country.

The omission in the Rhodesian’s Sunday Mail version was obviously intended to raise the moral and historical status of the Rhodesian to the level of the black luminaries who had not only defied, but prevailed over the racist travesty he had zealously defended.

It is the shameless Rhodesian’s parasitic attempt to share the glory of the genuine champions of human rights in the same manner a desolate moon-surface reflects the light of the sun as its own.
I am not writing this out of spleen. I am simply a descendent of abused black people defending the history of our struggle from distortion. I cannot stand the Rhodesian fraud leeching onto those who survived the institutional abuse that he defended by force of arms now attempting to pass their human rights achievements as his own. I cannot watch the Rhodesian white-washing white crimes against black humanity and actually attempting to replace an indelible memory with lies.

David Coltart’s forgery makes it clear that our struggle is as much vulnerable to theft and subversion as our natural resources, and the only way to preserve it is to record it from their own point of view and to know it by heart, so that no Rhodesians who fought to preserve exclusive white-privilege can re-cast themselves as the champions of their black victims’ rights.

If the Rhodesian, David Coltart, has to talk about RECONCILIATION in Zimbabwe, then he owes it to his black victims not to talk about it without reference. He must acknowledge that RECONCILIATION is not a self-defining absolute unit of meaning. It is defined by a context of conflict, and in the Rhodesian context, he was the villain using force of arms to harvest exclusive affluence from the abuse of black people who were left with no dignified alternative but to wage armed liberation struggle.

In that conflict, David Coltart was a critical component of the racist war machine that wrought a genocide that claimed the lives of over 50 000 black people. In that conflict, Comrade Robert Mugabe, now President of Zimbabwe led black people’s struggle against David Coltart and his Rhodesian kith and kin. The late national hero Comrade Nathan Shamuyarira whom Coltart is now leeching onto for redemption was a cadre in that struggle.

It is clear that after dismally losing as the leading local agent of British imperialism in Zimbabwe, David Coltart is trying his 1981 deception again, in order to niche some moral credibility and relevance in a new nationalist Zimbabwe.

However, given how much the information explosion has given us on the Rhodesian, we certainly won’t make it easy for him.

___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

This was my reply to this article which I sent to the Editor of The Patriot.

The Editor
The Patriot

This is a pathetic and racist piece of writing which you should be ashamed of. I was asked by the Sunday Mail to write a story in praise of Minister Shamuyarira which I did. I did not ask to do this – the Sunday Mail asked me. Your outburst does not do the late Minister Shamuyarira proud and I am sure as an editor he would not have tolerated such unprofessionalism, done in such bad taste.

Furthermore you have totally twisted the exclusion of the opening phrase of the telegram – yes it said as you say it did – that is part of the public record – but that is why I specifically wrote, and I quote, “Prime Minister Mugabe was briefed on all that had happened and on the 19th August 1981 he sent a telegram to me stating”! The Prime Minister was briefed by me and others but it is tedious to go into that detail. He didn’t just respond to my message – he had also been briefed by others but it was unnecessary to go into that detail. The opening phrase was accordingly superfluous. Indeed I think I arguably get more to gain by showing that I was proactive in sending a message to the Prime Minister – but that was not the only spur for his message, because both Minister Shamuyarira and Minister Norman had briefed him.

I will be interested whether you allow this comment to be posted.

Senator David Coltart

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Zimbabwe national teams a disaster in the making

Newsday

Newsday Editorial

10th June 2014

THE Mighty Warriors became the latest national football team to crash out of a continental competition – the African Women Championships (AWC) – after they fell 2-0 on aggregate to Zambia on Sunday.

Their male counterparts – the Warriors – drew 2-2 against Tanzania the previous weekend to bow out of the Africa Cup of Nations (Afcon) qualifiers 3-2 on aggregate.

It has been a disaster in the making for Zimbabwe’s national teams due to a plethora of problems and the easiest way to deal with them, some believe, was to fire the coaches and the Zifa Board.

However, the problems will always be there as long as challenges affecting the national teams are personalised by targeting individuals in charge of football or the various national teams.

The trends that followed the two teams are similar –demand more money, boycott training and then lose. Well, that completes a miserable two weeks for Zimbabwean football lovers, who now have to take their sorrows to the Castle Lager Premier Soccer League and the Fifa World Cup.

The difference between Zambia and Zimbabwe is “naked”. The Football Association of Zambia (FAZ) is led by a former footballer, who has all the football contacts in the world, including technical supplier Nike.

Zifa is led by Cuthbert Dube, a businessman, who might not even know where Luveve Stadium is and perhaps has never watched a football match there.

In 2008, FAZ president Kalusha Bwalya made it clear that if one of their national teams does not win an Afcon tourney, then he would have failed to develop the game in Zambia.

“If we don’t win one of two Afcons in 2012 and 2013, we may never do. Our girls should by 2015 be good enough to go to an Afcon,” Kalusha said then. He achieved all those goals.

The Zambia Under-15 women’s team qualified for the Fifa World Cup that was staged in Costa Rica and now their senior women’s team have qualified for the AWC after thrashing Zimbabwe’s Mighty Warriors.

Who knows, they might be in the top three at the end of the finals in Namibia later this year and earn a ticket to the Women’s World Cup.

Their men’s team was crowned the 2012 African champions. This can only happen when there is proper planning and putting the right people in charge of the game, harnessing the little resources available, setting realistic targets and hiring visionary coaches.

Sport, Arts and Culture minister Andrew Langa has suggested that a football indaba be held as a matter of urgency as the solution does not lie in firing the Dube-led Zifa Board, which will, no doubt, invite sanctions from world football governing body Fifa.

Under ex-minister David Coltart, Zimbabwe had one such indaba, but the country is yet to establish what the fruits of that gathering were. Perhaps it is time to be realistic and forgo another indaba, which will gobble the little resources that are available.

It is important to note that it will take more than roundtables to get the country’s football right. Besides talkshops, Zimbabwe needs the money to finance and develop football.

Zimbabwe’s football administrators must shape up or ship out!

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“He brought hope for South Africa” – Coltart

Sunday Mail

By David Coltart

8th June 2014

I was asked by the Sunday Mail to write about the late Minister Nathan Shamuyarira. This is what I wrote.

“I did not know Nathan Shamuyarira well. He had already retired by the time I was elected to Parliament in 2000. In fact my only interaction with him was back in July 1980, soon after independence. At the time I was part of the leadership of the University of Cape Town’s Zimbabwe Society, and about to become its Chairman. We decided that, given the desire for reconciliation expressed by then Prime Minister Robert Mugabe, we would do all we could to encourage Zimbabwean students to return home after their studies.

It was in that context that I met with Minister Shamuyarira , who was then Minister of Information, at his office on the 11th July 1980. The purpose was to ask him for his assistance in arranging a “Focus on Zimbabwe” week to enable students to hear about what the future held for them in Zimbabwe. I was in the company of a fellow law student Derrick Fine, then a member of the UCT Students Representative Council (and who subsequently became a leading anti-apartheid activist in South Africa), who was authorised to extend an invitation to the Minister on behalf of the University.

We had a very productive meeting with Minister Shamuyarira and it resulted in agreement being reached for the late Mr Justin Nyoka to come to UCT to speak to the Zimbabwean students. We made extensive arrangements and Mr Nyoka was due to address students on the 22 August 1980 and have lunch with UCT Vice Chancellor Sir Richard Luyt. Sadly at the 11th hour the apartheid regime refused Mr Nyoka a visa so the entire event had to be cancelled.

However the following year Minister Shamuyarira helped facilitate contact with then Agriculture Minister Dennis Norman and a further attempt was made at having a Focus on Zimbabwe week with Minister Norman scheduled to be the key note speaker. Sadly that event was banned as well by the apartheid regime and I was then threatened with deportation by the regime!

Prime Minister Mugabe was briefed on all that had happened and on the 19th August 1981 he sent a telegram to me stating:

“Dear Mr Coltart,

I am happy and encouraged to learn that Zimbabwean students at Cape Town University are ready and willing to return home on completion of their studies to serve their country. As you are no doubt aware we in government intend to establish a non racial society based on equality and the promotion of the well being of all our people in accordance with our socialist principles. it is in this connection that we have adopted the policy of reconciliation whereby our people must put aside the hatreds and animosities of the past and approach the future with a positive and constructive frame of mind and with commitment and dedication to the all round development of the new Zimbabwe.

As we struggle to re-build our country out of the destruction of war we look to young people like yourselves to assist us achieve our objective of establishing a prosperous, harmonious and humane society in this country. I call on all of you who have completed your studies to return and join us in the urgent tasks before us.

I hardly need to remind you that this is as much your home as it is ours. As has often been said, in identifying with and returning to the new Zimbabwe, you have nothing to fear but fear itself.

Yours sincerely,

R.G. Mugabe,
Prime Minister of the Republic of Zimbabwe.”

That telegram had a profound impact on the entire student body at UCT. It was made into posters by the SRC which were plastered throughout the University. At the time the struggle against apartheid was bitter and so these constructive and positive words were deeply encouraging to all students at UCT who feared what the end of apartheid would bring. If there was hope for Zimbabweans then there could be hope for South Africans too.

This was all made possible by the preparedness of Minister Shamuyarira to meet Derrick Fine and me in the first place.”

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Coltart warns Government over teachers

The Standard

By Edgar Gweshe

8th June 2014

Former Education minister, David Coltart says government should treat the issue of teachers’ salaries as a matter of urgency or risk plunging the education sector into turmoil.

In an interview, Coltart said that government’s failure to address the issue of teachers’ salaries and working conditions was killing morale among the teaching staff.

He warned that the situation could get out of control if government did not take steps to address teachers’ concerns.

“If you have committed teachers, then you have a strong education system. Teachers make the difference and if we do not address teachers’ concerns then the education sector will be under threat,” said Coltart.

“Teachers are the most important facet of any education sector and government should be able to look into their concerns.”

The Progressive Teachers Union of Zimbabwe (PTUZ) has since sought audience with President Robert Mugabe following government’s failure to improve their salaries and working conditions.

The PTUZ has also hinted on embarking on a job action in the event that their concerns are not addressed. The union also took a swipe at Education minister, Lazarus Dokora for failing teachers and bringing disastrous policies to the education sector.

Salaries for Zimbabwean teachers are below the country’s Poverty Datum Line (PDL) which is currently pegged at around US$560.

Neighbouring countries such as Botswana have since offered lucrative salaries for Zimbabwean teachers willing to work in their country, a development that could lead to further brain drain in the education sector.

Said Coltart: “I am concerned about the declining morale among teachers in the country. It has to be noted that before we talk of the success of the education sector, we have to make sure that teachers’ concerns are addressed but the current situation is very worrisome and poses a major threat.”

The former education minister was not convinced government would be able to carry forward with programmes introduced during his tenure that were meant to improve the education sector.

“We identified that teachers’ conditions of service were poor and morale was very low. I secured US$23 million from the Global Education Project for teacher retraining which was meant to be implemented starting this year,” he said.

“One of the goals that we had set was a review of the curriculum but I do not see much on the curriculum review programme and I remain concerned about the declining morale among teachers.”

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‘Dokora must consult’

Zimbabwe Independent

By Elias Mambo

6th June 2014

PLANS by Primary and Secondary Education minister Lazarus Dokora to revamp the education curriculum have set tongues wagging as stakeholders and educationists insist there is need for serious consultations before any policy is changed.

Although stakeholders agree that a review of the education system is long overdue, they insist Dokora should engage stakeholders and educationists to get advice on what direction the education system should take, instead of unilaterally making decisions.

Since his appointment Dokora has introduced a cocktail of policy interventions which include, among others, the banning of extra lessons at public institutions and fund-raising initiatives by Students Development Associations, cancellation of incentives for teachers and Form One entrance tests, suspension of development projects and recently the introduction of hot sitting in schools.

He is also changing the syllabus of all primary and secondary schools.While some educationists are supportive of curriculum change, they are worried by the lack of consultation.

Former Education, Sport, Arts and Culture minister David Coltart said the curriculum needs to be revamped but in a proper manner.

“The curriculum is in dire need of revamping as it was last done in 1986. However it needs to be done in an apolitical way by educationists not politicians,” Coltart said.

“I do not know what the current government wants to introduce but under my tenure I wanted educationists to review and reform the curriculum to ensure that it was brought up to date.”

However Progressive Teachers Union of Zimbabwe secretary-general, Raymond Majongwe, said the Education minister needs to be properly advised before the education system collapses again.

“He (Dokora) needs to consult stakeholders including parents on where he wants to take our education system. He must not politicise our education system so that it serves purposes of the (economic blueprint Zimbabwe Agenda for Sustainable Socio-Economic Transformation) ZimAsset.

“Parents are furious over a number of interventions by Dokora with the latest being that the Cambridge examinations will be banned.”
Government also banned payment of incentives to teachers by parents and guardians claiming to “restore sanity and equality in the education sector”.

In an interview with this paper Zimbabwe Teachers’ Association chief executive officer Sifiso Ndlovu said his association is looking forward to the curriculum review but said the minister has to investigate what needs to be done.

“Our curriculum is not aligned to the needs of the economy so as an association we are looking forward to this process,” Ndlovu said.

“It must be noted that the whole process should be done properly with all stakeholders including parents and industry being involved in the consultations,” he said.

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Coltart praises Zimbabwe Golf Awards

The Zimbabwean

5th June 2014

Former Minister of Education, Sport, Arts and Culture – David Coltart, this week applauded the Zimbabwe Golf Awards Organising Committee for coming up with their own Golf Hall of Fame.

The event will be held this evening at the Rainbow Towers, mainly to celebrate 2013 golf excellence.

“Coming up with an event that honours golf is a positive move for our country and I am impressed with such progress. It shows that my efforts in the development of sporting events like golf, rugby and hockey are coming to fruition,” said Coltart.

“During my tenure in office, I made it clear that we needed a new approach to allow all citizens to participate in these sporting activities. We have to rally behind this executive. I have always said it’s high time people understand that segregation has no place in this country.”

ZGAOC chairman, Oliver Gwaze, recently clarified the objective of the awards.

“This is the first time, golf awards are being held and we expect the awards committee to start looking at the 2014 awards and to improve on the ones we are starting with,” said Gwaze.

“It is our intention to work on an ambitious programme of coming up with a Golf Hall Of Fame in the near future, providing golf with role models to inspire other Zimbabweans and promote exemplary sports personalities.”

Categories available include Amateur Female Golfer of the Year, Amateur Male Golfer of the Year, Female Junior Golfer of the Year, Male Junior Golfer of the Year, Golf Development Programme of the Year as well as Corporate Recognition, the Golf Achievement and Life Time Golf Achievement among others.

The initiative will also reward individuals, the corporate world, communities and programmes that have achieved a constant high level record of golf service, assessing national golf performances, golf infrastructure and golf development programmes, while also providing a platform for promoting the image and popularity of the sport.

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Langa to appoint new Sports Commission board

The Herald

By Eddie Chikamhi – Sports Reporter

30th May 2014

SPORT, Arts and Culture Minister Andrew Langa revealed yesterday that he will appoint a new Sports Commission board. The current board was appointed by former Sports Minister David Coltart and some of its members have been accused of pursuing a hidden agenda to destablise Zimbabwe Cricket and doing little to address challenges affecting football.

Langa appeared before the Parliamentary Portfolio Committee on Sport, Arts and Culture yesterday.
“We are going to appoint new boards. Some of (the members) may be retained and some of them obviously may go home,” Langa said.

“The current chairperson of our SRC board is Joseph James who is based in Bulawayo and the chairperson of the (National) Arts Council is Nozipho Maraire.
“Definitely, they are in place as we speak now, operational especially the SRC.

“But soon we will be appointing new boards in line with the requirements of our Zim-Asset and we will ensure that we appoint the right persons who have the right qualifications and also have the background knowledge of the disciplines that we appoint them for.

“I said let us have men and women in our national associations, in our boards that have interest, people who have sport at heart.  “Most of them come into these national associations and most of them would want to be incorporated into our boards just for allowances and many other privileges.

“I said as we appoint our new boards we are going to ensure that we appoint the correct men and women who have the expertise and the background knowledge.” Temba Mliswa, the chairman of the Parliamentary Portfolio Committee on Sport, Arts and Culture, was not amused by the latest no-show by Zifa after the national football association failed to turn up for a meeting yesterday.

Mliswa said what was puzzling was the fact that Langa managed to respect the institution and addressed the committee yet the football leadership has repeatedly failed to show up.

The Hurungwe West legislator yesterday appealed to Langa to convince the leadership at 53 Livingston Avenue to honour the invitation as they seek to address problems bedevilling the game.

Zifa have been called to the committee previously but they indicated they were unable to turn up because of other commitments.
“On a sad note we have tried to engage Zifa on this platform and for the umpteenth time they didn’t come,” Mliswa said. “As a committee we don’t know what else to do if you the minister can come, what about them? We now appeal to your good office to encourage them to come.”

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Lazarus Dokora Calms Nerves

Financial Gazette

By Staff reporter

29th May 2014

AFTER introducing some sweeping changes in the education sector that won him friends and foes alike, Primary and Secondary Education Minister, Lazarus Dokora, this week moved to calm the nerves following rumours that teachers will, starting August, go unpaid during school holiday months.

Dokora told the Financial Gazette that government had no plans to stop paying teachers during school holiday months. He said: “I have heard the rumours but government has not sat down to make such a policy.” Teachers, who earn about US$500 monthly, have been seething with anger following indications that their employer was planning to scrap the payment of full salaries during April, August and December holidays. This would have seen teachers losing about US$1 500 annually.

What had given credence to the rumours is that Dokora has been making sweeping changes to the education sector since taking over from David Coltart last year. He has scrapped teachers’ incentives and outlawed the holding of holiday and extra lessons in all primary and secondary schools. Dokora said there was no justification for holding holiday or extra lessons, pointing out that most schools and teachers were using the initiative to fleece parents.

Teachers’ incentives were introduced in 2009 to motivate the poorly-paid teachers to work. They, however, became a divisive element as they worked mainly in urban areas where parents could afford them while teachers in rural areas never received the incentives. ― Staff Reporter

newsdesk@fingaz.co.zw

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Heath Streak Academy opens

Newsday

24th May 2014

By Sport Reporter

 

THE Heath Streak Academy, run by the former senior national cricket team captain, will be officially opened in Bulawayo tomorrow.

A member of the board of the academy, former Education, Sport, Arts and Culture minister David Coltart, says he is impressed with the effort that has been put to bring the facility, housed at the old Mac Club, to world standards.

He said in a Twitter and Facebook post yesterday:  “To celebrate the occasion, a Family Fun Day has been planned around the opening.  There is going to be a T20 cricket match which starts at 2pm and plenty of other things to do.

“In my capacity as a board member of the academy, I was shown around the academy on Tuesday and am amazed at how much work has been done by Heath and Nadine Streak and Joseph Rego and their team. There has been a substantial investment in rejuvenating the old Mac Club which it is almost unrecognisable.

“Aside from the wonderful new, enlarged cricket nets and the magnificent field, there is a new gym, completely renovated changing rooms, showers etc and a superb new restaurant. The academy is going to be a centre of sporting excellence for many sports, not just cricket.

While obviously the main focus is on cricket, the gym is going to be one of the best in Bulawayo, a 5 aside hockey pitch is being planned, there is a tiny tots rugby programme and swimming coaching.

“I urge the Bulawayo public to turn out in support of this great initiative by one of our sporting heroes who is putting so much back into our community. So many people either leave or just give up on Zimbabwe — Heath, supported by Nadine, Joseph and many in the Bulawayo business community, has demonstrated that with a positive spirit miracles can be achieved, even in the most depressed economies. So if you want your spirits lifted and to be encouraged, come along on Sunday (tomorrow).”

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