Mobile Voter Registration Centres for Week 25th-30th June 2013

Please find below a list of all the Mobile Voter Registration Centres that are operating this week in Bulawayo.

 

Ward                                        Venue                                                                          Date

3                              i)              KhumaloPrimary School                                  23/06/13-27/06/13

ii)             Centenary Primary School                               28/06/13-01/07/13

6                              i)             Founders High School                                        22/06/13-25/06/13

7                              i)              LotshePrimary School                                       26/06/13-29/06/13

18                           i)              Magwegwe Community Hall                            24/06/13-27/06/13

20                           i)              MgoqoPrimary School                                      28/06/13-01/07/13

12                           i)              LobengulaSecondary School                           22/06/13-25/06/13

13                           i)              Iminyela Community Hall                                  26/06/13-30/06/13

26                           i)              SenzangakhonaPrimary School                      22/06/13-26/06/13

27                           i)              Pumula South Community Hall                       27/06/13-30/06/13

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Statement regarding using schools to conduct primary elections

Statement by the Minister of Education, Sport, Arts and Culture regarding using schools to conduct primary elections

I have received several reports and complaints today about schools being used countrywide to conduct ZANU PF primary elections. I have stated, as policy, on numerous occasions in the last 4 years that schools should not be used under any circumstances for partisan political activity. I have stated the various sound educational reasons for that policy which include the fact that children and teachers need a safe and peaceful environment to study in.

This is a policy which has been in place for many years, at least in theory, and which I have simply reinforced.

It goes without saying that the use of schools has been done without my permission and in flagrant breach of that policy. I have no doubt that the education of the children in the schools used will have been adversely affected. None of the other major parties have had to use schools to conduct their primary elections and have been able to hold their primaries without disrupting the lives and education of children. So there is no excuse for this type of conduct.

I have no doubt that some within Zanu PF will have done this as a deliberate snub to remind the public who is physically more powerful in this Government. I am of course powerless to prevent this conduct because there is no point in turning to the Police or other law enforcement agencies who have for sometime demonstrated their own partisanship. Likewise school heads cannot be criticised because they are at the mercy of local Zanu PF operatives who would make their lives miserable if they so much as tried to resist and protect the policy. However those who feel smug about what they have done today should think about their legacy and the adverse consequences of their actions on the lives of the children affected.

It goes without saying that I condemn in the strongest terms possible the use of schools for partisan political purposes. I long for the day when our education system and educational institutions become sacrosanct. That clearly will never happen under a Zanu PF government.

Senator David Coltart.
Minister of education, Sport, Arts and Culture.
Harare.

25th June 2013

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Education Ministry in a quandary Paltry $20 000 allocated for two months

Sunday News

By Vusumuzi Dube 

23 June 2013

THE Ministry of Education, Sport, Arts and Culture is in a quandary after the Government recently allocated it a paltry $20 000 meant to cover administration   costs for the months of May and June, a situation that has been described as traumatic for the education sector. Education, Sport, Arts and Culture Minister Senator David Coltart revealed that his

ministry was facing crisis because the $20 000 was far from being enough for them to operate for the two months.

He revealed that in such a scenario their provincial offices risked being evicted because of failure to pay rentals.

“While the Minister of Finance Tendai Biti has so far assured us that he will give us a further $300 000 that is after I put some pressure on him, I must say that we had been allocated a paltry $20 000 and all things being equal this falls far short of what we need to cover all our costs even just for a month.

“To be frank, our provincial offices will risk closure as we won’t be able to pay our rentals with such an amount and that in itself will spell great danger to the education sector as a whole because without our provincial offices, our operations will be crippled,” said Minister Coltart.

The minister noted that they especially required money to purchase fuel as this was a key resource for their teacher-monitoring activities.

“As you might know, we really need money for us to effectively monitor the performance of our teachers, therefore, with such an amount we can’t buy fuel for our provincial and district officers and overally this is very traumatic to the education sector because basically we need as much financial resources as possible if we are really going to invest in the education sector,” he said.

Senator Coltart said all in all the ministry needed just over $300 000 for them to operate in a month.

Minister Coltart has in the past expressed concern with regards to the Government’s budget allocation to the education sector saying this was not adequate for the full revival of the sector.

According to the 2013 National Budget, the Ministry of Finance allocated $754 million to the Education Ministry.

Results from this year’s O-level examinations exposed the need for the Government to channel most of its financial resources to the sector as out of the 172 689 candidates whor egistered for public examinations last year, only 31 767 managed passes in at least five subjects or more.

The O-level pass rate stood at 18,4 percent, a 1,1 percent drop from the 2011 statistics.

Previously, the pass rate had been as follows: 2003 (13 percent); 2004 (10,2 percent); 2005 (12 percent); 2006 (14,2 percent); 2007 (9,85 percent); 2008 (14,44 percent); 2009 (19,33 percent) and 2010 (16,5 percent).

The A-level pass rate for 2012 also marginally dropped to 82,09 percent from 85,2 percent the previous year.

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Police ban PTUZ demo against Coltart

Daily News
By Mugove Tafirenyika
23 June 2013
HARARE - Police have barred Progressive Teachers’ Union of Zimbabwe (PTUZ) from staging a demonstration against Education minister David Coltart.

The teachers union wanted to present a damning petition to Coltart protesting arbitrary transfer of its members from Harare metropolitan province.

Raymond Majongwe, PTUZ secretary general said police had refused to sanction the march to Coltart’s office notwithstanding the fact that the minister and his permanent secretary Constance Chigwamba — who had been formally informed in writing about the planned march —  had not objected to the demonstration.

Paul Nyathi, police spokesperson, said PTUZ’s application had a lot of inadequacies in terms of the provisions of the law hence its dismissal.

“The notification was not in conformity with the provisions of the law because they did not indicate the route they were going to take and the number of participants in the intended march,” Nyathi said.

“Moreover they gave us very short notice and so we called their representative and explained this.”

But Majongwe said his organisation had notified the police in writing in a June 12, 2013 letter in terms of the requirements of the Public Order and Security Act [Chapter 11:17]. 

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City lawyers eye MDC tickets

Southern Eye

By Nqobani Ndlovu

21 June 2013

TWO prominent Bulawayo lawyers have forwarded their names for nomination as MDC candidates for the party’s primaries expected to be concluded at the weekend.

Sindiso Mazibisa of Cheda and Partners and Matshobana Ncube of Phulu and Ncube are set to slug it out with other prospective candidates in primary elections for the Welshman Ncube-led MDC, amid indications that the consensus method had failed in their coveted constituencies.

Mazibisa has expressed interest in the Magwegwe constituency, where he will face off with Oscar Dube.

Ncube on the other hand will do battle with Ngwalo Nyathi and a candidate only referred to as Dube.

MDC spokesman Nhlanhla Dube will on the other hand battle it out with Dingulwazi Masuku for the Lobengula-Njube constituency.

“If we get venues, the primaries will go ahead at the weekend. Everything is dependent on venues,” MDC provincial spokesman Edwin Ndlovu said.

Meanwhile, Education minister David Coltart — Bulawayo East Senator — has been spared the agony of going through primary elections after he was nominated unopposed.

Coltart is one of four party officials that did not go through the primary elections to be selected to represent the MDC in the upcoming elections.

Coltart has been confirmed together with Sibongile Maphosa, the MDC secretary for the women’s assembly (Bulawayo Central) while Thabile Ndlovu, a district chairperson in Makokoba and councillor Israel Mabaleka, were selected to represent Makokoaba and Luveve constituencies respectively.

The MDC is using a consensus process in its candidate selection system where aspiring legislators meet to discuss among themselves and agree on who will represent the party in the elections.

Where candidates fail to agree on who will represent a constituency, primaries are held.

Primary elections have so far been held in five constituencies.

Duduzile Dube, a national executive member, won primary elections to represent the MDC in Mpopoma-Pelandaba, while Loyisa Ncube a district executive member won in Pumula, Christabel Sibanda, an executive member in the women’s assembly (Emakhandeni-Entumbane), Pastor Esnart Bulayani an organiser in the women’s assembly (Bulawayo South) and
Alderman Charles Mpofu won primaries to represent the party in Nketa.

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Presidential decrees — Mugabe’s lethal weapon

The Independent

By Brian Chitemba

21 June 2013

PRESIDENT Robert Mugabe seems to have perfected the art of abusing the draconian Presidential Powers (Temporary Measures) Act (PPTM Act) to make far-reaching changes to electoral laws to suit his political agenda before every election, analysts say.

According to Section 2(1)(c) of the Act, the president shall only issue a decree if “because of the urgency, it is inexpedient to await the passage through parliament of an Act dealing with the situation”.

However, Mugabe, before every election, particularly since 2000, has always resorted to the emergency powers to change the rules of the game.

Despite attempts in the new constitution to restrict the use of the powers of decree, Mugabe last week unilaterally amended the Electoral Act through an extraordinary Government Gazette Statutory Instrument 85 of 2013 to pave way for the proclamation of elections dates and self-serving changes to the law. He has always done this before every election.

Before the 2008 elections, Mugabe enacted Statutory Instrument Number 46 of 2008 in a move which his rival, MDC-T leader Morgan Tsvangirai said showed “everything that is wrong with this election in particular and Zimbabwe in general”.

The regulations sought to amend Sections 55, 59 and 60 of the Electoral Act Chapter 2:13 as amended by the Electoral Laws Act Amendment No 17 of 2007. Amendment No 17 to the Electoral Act, which became law on January 11 2008, was a piece of law negotiated between the MDC parties and Zanu PF during the Sadc-sponsored talks facilitated by former South African president Thabo Mbeki.

That piece of legislation was agreed to and signed by the parties in Pretoria on October 30 2007 and presented to Sadc through Mbeki on the very same day. Those amendments, together with changes to the Public Order and Security Act, Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act and the Broadcasting Act, which were all passed in parliament on December 20 2007 and gazetted on January 11 2008, were hotly contested.

“Mugabe’s appetite of making presidential decrees through his legendary abuse of the Presidential Powers (Temporary Measures) Act Chapter 10:20 is unacceptable as it is a clear breach of the rule of law,” MDC-T secretary-general Tendai Biti said at the time.

“Allowing Mugabe to make decrees is a breach of the doctrine of the separation of powers. Put simply, the Presidential Powers (Temporary Measures) Act is itself clearly unconstitutional.”

The PPTM Act came into force in 1987 when Mugabe became executive president after the abolition of the ceremonial presidency and prime ministerial posts. The architect of legislation was the late Justice minister Eddison Zvobgo.

Since then, Mugabe has been abusing the PPTM Act to make changes before elections to ensure his re-election.

After realising that Zanu PF’s urban support base was waning, Mugabe invoked the PPTM Act in 1995.

Prior to the 2002 presidential elections, he was at it again as he used his presidential powers to introduce a raft of amendments to the Electoral Act which influenced the running and outcome of the polls.

Barely 24 hours before the polls, Mugabe invoked the PPMT Act to make a cocktail of changes to Section 158 of the Electoral Act resulting in the disenfranchement of “aliens”, banning of postal votes, limiting the number of polling stations in urban centres and extending the voter registration campaign in Zanu PF strongholds.

The MDC-T challenged Mugabe’s controversial actions in the Supreme Court, but the case was thrown out a month after the elections.

In similar fashion last week, Mugabe used his powers to amend the Electoral Act and smuggled in a provision which extends the voter registration exercise by 12 days after nomination day.

Section 26A of the Electoral Act 2:13 initially provided that voter registration be finalised 24 hours before the nomination court sits after which 44 days must elapse between the proclamation of election dates and polling day.

Mugabe abused his contentious powers to meet the July 31 election deadline as ordered by the Constitutional Court (Concourt).

MDC secretary for legal affairs David Coltart, who is a lawyer, criticised Mugabe for using the presidential powers last week describing his move as “unconstitutional” since Section 157(1) states that only an Act of parliament can be used.

He argued Section 2(1)(c) of the PPTM Act provides that the president shall only issue a decree in urgent cases which cannot await parliamentary debate, but last week’s proclamation was not necessary as parliament is still sitting until June 29.

If changes to the Electoral Amendment Bill were urgent, parliament could have convened immediately to pass the amendments agreed to at last week’s cabinet meeting.

“Section 157(1) of the new constitution states that ‘An Act of parliament must provide for the conduct of elections’. In other words, the new constitution specifically requires that the matter of electoral process be provided for by an Act. In other words, the Presidential Powers Act, as undemocratic as it is, cannot be used for this type of matter even if it is deemed urgent,” Coltart said.

“The flip side of the same coin is that Section 157(1) states that an Act of parliament must provide for the conduct of elections. Section 2(1) makes it quite clear that the president can only issue ‘regulations’. Regulations are not an Act of parliament.”

However, constitutional lawyer Lovemore Madhuku defended Mugabe’s use of presidential powers saying he by-passed parliament to comply with the Concourt ruling.

But Constitutional and Parliamentary Affairs minister Eric Matinenga insisted Mugabe acted “unconstitutionally”.

Sadc leaders resolved last weekend Mugabe’s amendments must be reversed and done through parliament.

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When book education is not enough

The Herald

20 June 2013

By Nyasha Mutena

TENDAI KUCHERA (28) is basking in the warm sunshine of the morning, like any other day in his life. He is surely going to spend the day hopping from one person he comes across on the streets to the other, begging for money or engaging in quick illicit deals just so to buy “the stress relief pill” as he likes to call dagga while using hunger as an excuse.

With unkempt hair and his mouth smelling like rotten garbage while his body, smelling strong cigarette odour, everything about him is a disaster.

Even life itself has lost its meaning, and he cannot deny that fact, either.

However, no one, even among his daily saviours, would ever guess he was once part of Zimbabwe’s basic education curriculum.

Basic education curricular entitles citizens to go through a certain level of education and in Zimbabwe Government has ensured that one studies from primary level and attain at least a General Certificate in Education Ordinary Level and/or Advanced Level certificates.

Pupils have to at least attain at least five subjects at O-Level including English and Mathematics.

Tendai went through Zimbabwe’s basic education curricular but he just was not a bright student because not everyone is gifted that way.

He, however, boasts magical drawing fingers when it comes to art and given the money and opportunity, he could surely have excelled but he came from a very poor family background – so poor that they hardly had a decent meal on a daily basis.

And to this date, Tendai blames Zimbabwe’s education system for his predicament.

He feels he was not given an opportunity to explore and appreciate his potential.

Tendai’s case is, however, not unique as there are a lot who are in the same situation.  Many people believe Zimbabwe’s education system gives meaning to the notion that the mistakes of a teacher are seen roaming the street, hence the plight of those who roam the streets. These are believed to have failed to make it academically.

However, educationists including Education, Sport, Arts and Culture Minister David Coltart believe many Zimbabweans have been let down by the basic education curricular.

The Deputy Provincial Education Director for Harare, Mr Valerio Mukova, said Government had established special classes for extra-curricular activities.

“We have special classes that are meant for extra-curricular education in most of our schools but we are short of the rightful personnel to do so. We are facing financial constrains and lack of resources in our schools,” he said.

“Our students are on the streets because of this. However, it is conceivable to suggest that if we as a ministry have finances to retain our teachers, surely the education system should be able to cater for every child’s needs,” he said.

Minister Coltart believes Zimbabwe’s education system has to be revisited.

“We have heard a good education system for 50 years and the pass rates demonstrate its strengths but the education somehow collapsed.

“The whole system needs to be reviewed. Practical subjects also need to be included in the new system. We do have a major challenge in that most rural schools lack the practical skills at all,” he said.

Minister Coltart said extra-curricular education needs to be introduced at the “earliest possible stage”.

Educationist Mr Wellington Koke said while the basic education curricular plays a major in the development of children from a tender age it does not address the skills needed later in life.

“There has to be a policy to harness specific potential and technical skill at an early stage. We do not have it because our system is too academic and one struggles to make it academically because they is no room and it is like there is no Plan B.”

He concurs with Minister Coltart that the system needs revamping.

“It is difficult to identify natural talent in children and where it is done its peripheral. It is just by chance or luck, therefore the system must be reviewed,” Mr Koke said.

Meanwhile, it is believed that the idea of simply imparting skills and knowledge to others does not define education but is rather misguiding and that is why education is inadequate.

People have diplomas and degrees but are still unemployable. From the primary secondary school levels extra-curricular education is not accessible, all owing to the system.

For example, Hatcliffe has two primary schools and a single secondary school only, all of which should cater for every child within the vicinity with adequate literacy.

This automatically means they all have to adhere to the stipulations because beggars are surely not choosers, which brings to the question on what would happen to those who fail the basic education.

Either they become permanent “home defenders” or they strive to make it in life and some may even resort to illegal deals as the case of Tendai.

“The curriculum is excellent by 1980 standards and Zimbabwe has the highest literacy rate in Africa at 92 percent but the high literacy rate is not translating to the economic strength and there are no remarkable inventions.

“Zimbabwe needs to develop a positive mindset towards education as a nation and in the process creativity and resilience,” an analyst said.

She said information technology is of paramount importance because most schools in Zimbabwe have computers without properly trained teachers leading to most patriotic Zimbabweans doing nothing about changing the false image that has been portrayed around the world.  Positive values of respect, resourcefulness, attitude, morality and accountability are crucial if the education puzzle is to be complete.

“Attitude is to education what a sail is to a ship, if the sail is pointing in the wrong direction, the ship goes in the wrong direction and if it doesn’t have a sail it will not move.”

Focus was on access to education with very little thought on quality but, however, curriculum reforms need an overhaul not just a review.

There must be a global view on the education system where no one is ashamed on a global scale thus our curriculum together with civic education will have a direct bearing on the economic development of the nation. This also calls for a tailor-made education system where there is civic education and children are given the choice to appreciate something other than basic education curricular.

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Longman Changes Hands

The Financial Gazette

By Paul Nyakazeya

20 June 2013

Pearson International, the world’s leading publishing company, has transferred its book publishing and distribution business in Zimbabwe, Longman Zimbabwe, to Consultus Publishing Services (CPS) which has been appointed an exclusive agent in the country, The Financial Gazette’s Companies & Markets (C&M) can report. CPS, which is registered as Consultus Services Pvt Ltd, is owned by Mwazvita Patricia Madondo, a former managing director of Longman Zimbabwe and regional director for Longman Zambia and Malawi.

The agency is with effect from  June 1, 2013. It was not immediately clear how much was involved in the transfer of the Longman Zimbabwe business to an agent, first reported by C&M last month. A letter from Pearson Education Africa’s managing director, Jane Bursey, dated June 10, 2013 and seen by this newspaper, said Pearson had changed its business model in Zimbabwe from company to agency.

“Therefore, Longman Zimbabwe and all imprints under Pearson, Longman and Heinemann will now be marketed and distributed by an agent with effect from 1 June 2013,” reads part of the letter.

“The agent will interface with all Pearson customers. “Pearson transferred the business to the agent as a going concern, that is, transferring all marketing, distribution and administration staff thereby engaging all the experience and expertise gained over the years Longman was in operation,” she said.

The letter said while CPS would interface with customers and supply learning materials, Pearson would devote its time to developing teaching and learning materials for the Zimbabwe curriculum.

“Pearson strives to publish materials and produce learning and teaching tools that reflect the needs of the market, improves learner attainment and ultimately drives the economic growth of the nation. Hence, there will be a continued interface with all Zimbabwe stakeholders, through the agent CPS, to ensure materials are developed to meet the needs of the customer,” the letter said.

Bursey said Pearson “strongly believe the new business model would be a success”.

Longman Zimbabwe publishes educational materials from early childhood materials for pre-school children and continuing up to ‘O’ and ‘A’ levels as well as tertiary education.

Their books are compiled by a team of locally and internationally experienced educationists and teachers.

In 2010, Longman was awarded a five-year United Nations Children’s Fund contract to print 30 million primary school text books to 5 500 schools ahead of other bidders.

This was to avert a catastrophic textbook shortage and further decline in the country’s educational standards.

The awarding of the tender created disconted in the industry, with two major competitors, the Zimbabwe Publishing House and College Press, calling for its suspension.

However, the Minister of Education, David Coltart, who approved the tender, defended Longman saying it won the tender because of its charges and its quality.

Unicef forked out US$52 million on the tender.

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ZANU PF’s diamond ‘whistleblower’ Chindori-Chininga dies in car crash

SW Radio Africa

By Violet Gonda

2o June 2013

The ZANU PF MP for Guruve South, Edward Chindori-Chininga, died in a car crash in his constituency on Wednesday. No other vehicle was involved in the accident.

This has set Zimbabwe talking because last Wednesday he released a damning report about the involvement of ZANU PF officials and allies in the diamond industry.

Only two weeks ago the lawmaker was at the Kimberley Process meeting in South Africa and delegates told SW Radio Africa he was openly critical of the diamond situation in Zimbabwe.

The maverick politician was known in the diamond world as a man who tried to shine a light on the murky practices at the Marange Diamond fields.

Alan Martin the director of research at Partnership Africa Canada, a civil society organization that is part of the Kimberley Process, communicated extensively with Chindori- Chininga in recent weeks. He revealed on the Hot Seat programme how Chindori-Chininga told him earlier this month that he knew he was a “marked man” and that his work as chairman of the parliamentary committee on mines and energy had ended his political career in ZANU PF.

The former mines minister is said to have told delegates at a workshop in South Africa two weeks ago that some of the individuals in government who complained about the targeted western sanctions were the same people who were benefitting the most by the restrictions, because the sanctions allowed them to operate in the grey zone.

“I got the sense in the meetings I had with him in early June that I think he recognized that his work on this issue had certainly ended his political career. He was very open about how ZANU PF was not going re-sign his nomination papers to run as a ZANU PF candidate.

“And I think perhaps his parting shot was that he wanted to have a definitive record of what his committee’s observation had been of this issue before the parliamentary period closed next week,” Martin said.

Last week, Chindori- Chininga presented a highly critical report to parliament on Zimbabwe’s diamond industry.

SW Radio Africa has also a copy of an email he wrote to various people, mainly international civil society organizations, sharing the contents of this report.

Owing to the sheer number of Zimbabwean politicians who have died in mysterious car crashes, speculation is rife on social forums that he died at the hands of individuals in the state security apparatus, who are loyal to ZANU PF.

Many people believe that when cornered, ZANU PF can be extremely ruthless towards its own people.

Some of the senior officials who died in car accidents that were regarded as suspicious include three political commissars; Moven Mahachi, Border Gezi and Elliot Manyika. Others include the commander of the ZANLA forces, Josiah Tongogara who died in an accident in Mozambique just before independence. Then there was the death of former army general Solomon Mujuru who died in a mysterious fire at his farm. Rumours circulated at the time that his death might be linked to diamonds.

Martin noted that the timing of Chindori-Chininga’s fatal accident, with the elections and the release of the report, makes people wonder if there was a sinister hand at play.

Partnership Africa Canada is one of the international organizations that extensively used the findings of the parliamentary portfolio committee in their reports and Martin said it revealed important information, which included how Mines Minister Obert Mpofu had “stacked the Zimbabwe Mining Development Corporation with his cronies, sister-in-law, his personal assistant and people with zero mining experience.”

As a former mines minister Chininga knew his subject well. He was also well known for interrogating people who testified before the committee, and would remind officials he knew were lying that they were under oath.

Chindori-Chininga described those who controlled Zimbabwe’s diamond sector as “diamond barons” and tried to use his position as the chairman of the portfolio committee to get to the truth about the Marange diamonds.

His committee showed how millions of dollars in royalties, paid by diamond firms, have disappeared. Mbada Mining said it had paid $293 million in taxes over four years but the government said it had received only $82 million.

“This was a pretty astounding thing and I think he was very clear in directing the responsibility for this directly at the executive, particularly the minister of mines,” Martin said.

Despite doing the right thing on the issue of diamonds, there are others who say he was still part of the ZANU PF machinery because in 2008 there were serious human rights abuses in his constituency, Guruve South, during the election period.

SOME FACEBOOK REACTIONS:

ZLHR spokesperson and journalist Kumbirai Mafunda
“Chindori-Chininga, Gone too soon. He was just one of the few Zanu PF members who patronised the Quill Club. I first met him either in 2003 or 2004 when I had an interview with him at his (the then) Mines and Energy Development Minister at Zimre Centre, corner Leopold Takawira and Union Avenue (then) in Salisbury. I was to associate with him years later on now as a lowly newsletter man in the Quill Club, he was one of the few Parliamentarians and ZANU PF members who was so passionate/addicted or exploited social media particularly Facebook to communicate. He would stick to his laptop while we chat in the Quill Club. Here, Valentine Maponga, Kwenda, Takura, Tabani, Nkosana can testify. We also had our few moments of disagreeing but surprising aipera zvakanaka even though taimbotsamwisana nenyaya dzekutongwa kwenyika idzi. Rest in Peace Honorable Chindori-Chininga.”

MDC 99 President Job Sikhala
“Hey, waking up and finding out this sad news that Hon. Edward Chindori Chininga is no more. I worked with him in Parliament and the man was quite humble and sober and was always one of the most eloquent interpreters of documents written in French. He would engage everyone on very important issues and share his experiences in life as the person who lived much of his life in French speaking countries. TRUE, to our adage that “munhu akanaka haararame”. May your dear soul rest in eternal peace, the gentle giant.”

Facebook commentator Brighton Musonza
“I think the best we can all do now is to allow the Hon Edward Takaruza Chindori-Chininga’s family to mourn one of their own in peace and dignity and allow them the privacy they deserve without us inflaming it into over drive super-spin. The initial reaction from last night was that of shock to everyone and we all said stuff but let us be a bit more civilised and be the people of Christian values and take note that we are in the middle of elections and a very fragile transitional process. With the growth of Social media, there is urgent need for embedded inherent self control as individuals to keep ourselves in check for the good of organised societies.”

Education Minister David Coltart
“I am sorry to hear of the death of Edward Chindori Chininga this evening. A brave MP whose recent exposé of corruption in mining was superb.”

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Ncube: The big winner in Maputo

News Day

By News Day Reporter

19 June 2013

SO the Sadc summit, which was dubbed as a make-or-break Zimbabwean election theatre script has now come and delivered resolutions that continue to tap into the high adrenaline levels that parties in our Global Political Agreement (GPA) sketch went in with.

Summit back row rumour has it that Ministers Tendai Biti, Elton Mangoma, Pricilla Misihairabwi-Mushonga and some Tanzanian folks were seen clearing their throats, faking a sneeze before losing the will to be honourable and burst out in laughter during what should have been serious deliberations. The comedy was not the look in an agitated adrenaline-filled face of Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai, but a response to the hurricane, but humorous delivery by the leader of what has often been described as the other MDC, Professor Welshman Ncube, the “Vunguman”.

Like most Zimbabweans, I love football. I am a life supporter of Highlanders and Arsenal and have long known that when I watch a match between Highlanders and Dynamos or Arsenal v Manchester United with someone who supports the opposite team, we would differ fundamentally on who played better and if, after a deliberate Rio foul on Theo in the box, the referee was right not to award a penalty. But even then, there are days when all fans come to conclude that van Persie was the man of the match, hands down.

In a similar polarised environment, where everyone was desperate to claim credit and victory, it appears to be the undisputed view of those who attended Maputo, from all political divides that the man of the summit, based on performance, effectiveness and results, was the Vunguman. But is this a significant arrival of a future President, or just another minor scene in this theatre of tribalised Zimbabwean politics?

The moral of that story remains that the summit was so important to both MDCs in so far as it needed a legal delivery. There were many whispers in the MDC-T. Some were anxious and would have preferred Minister Biti to do the talking for the party in place of an often blundering PM. There was no room for mediocre performance. It needed a seasoned lawyer. The stakes were too high. The old fox had gone too far.Relief and joy is evident from Biti’s rushed communication post summit to the public. Both MDCs and democracy loving Zimbabweans have one man to thank — Welshman Ncube — for rising to the occasion. It is said that he delivered a Usain Bolt of a speech that left an aging President Robert Mugabe embarrassed, forcing his Zanu PF party into a retreat and a grateful Tsvangirai. Biti even hinted Zimbabwe needed Ncube as part of the coalition package going forward.

Mugabe has said that the outcome of the summit, recommending that he approaches the Constitutional Court to ask for “one or two weeks” more is a happy outcome. The MDCs have celebrated the courage of Sadc to return Zimbabwe to common sense and constitutionalism.

The question that many will be asking themselves long after the Maputo tents come down is: “Who was the winner in Maputo?”

Mugabe and Zanu PF have been claiming victory of sovereignty by arguing that Sadc acknowledged the verdict of the Constitutional Court (Concourt) and thus reaffirmed the principle of non interference in member states’ judiciary systems. They may also be having quiet celebrations on the idea that both Sadc and the Concourt have identified it as Mugabe’s responsibility to approach the court and following the judgement, call for elections.

The MDCs, despite their protests have until now, not challenged both the Concourt on this using what Tsvangirai has often called the “GPA is clear that he cannot do it unilaterally.” Others have also doubted Tsvangirai’s assertion that it is him as PM who must be consulted while ignoring the fact that he has worked with Mugabe hand in glove to deny Ncube the same GPA right to be consulted.

There is a second thinking that Mugabe played a dummy by pushing for compliance with the July 31 ruling to gain ground on the Sadc and the other parties in the negotiations. It is an old trick of negotiations where you demand more than what you really want and hope that the negotiated outcome would be closer to what you really want.

This is cited especially by those who say in the event that the Concourt agrees to a two-week extension it is Mugabe who wins more ground than Tsvangirai because the latter was calling for elections in October 2013. Could it be that Mugabe has always eyed August 15 as the election date?

By coincidence or design, Justice Minister Patrick Chinamasa of Zanu PF is the man tasked with approaching the ConCourt following the Sadc resolutions. Do I hear someone say he may, if he chooses, present a weak case? There is also a legal possibility that the man who brought the initial action may challenge the jurisdiction of the court to hear a case when the Executive through the President has already complied by calling for elections.

The two scenarios are not likely to change much. If one considers that Zanu PF were calling for their primary elections on the 24th June, just four days before the sitting of the nomination court, one can assume that they always knew there would be a two-week extension. The elections are likely on August 14th or 15th 2013. That may explain why Mugabe did not seem bothered by the outcome of the Sadc summit and called it a happy outcome. Foxy!

MDC-T, on the other end, can bring the champagne bottles and claim victory for constitutionalism and common sense. Sadc has taken on board, the need to address media reforms and for securocrats to call a press conference and pledge to respect the constitution. For others like Biti, the very fact that Ncube saved the day vindicates those in
MDC-T who have always argued that a united MDC is a better ship to go into the election sea with. Their Matabeleland leadership may be dragging their feet for fear of being squeezed out by MDC led by Ncube.

The biggest winner by a mile though is Ncube. Here is a man that started it all, in a room with Brian Kagoro, Misihairabwi-Mushonga, and others including Tawanda Mutasa, Deprose Muchena etc. They started the National Costitution Assembly that then gave birth to the MDC.

Although Ncube was the founder of the vehicle that took Zimbabwe by storm in 1999, he looked at himself as others would have. He is a clever former Zapu member, educated, eloquent, and principled, but belongs to “the wrong tribe” being from Lower Gwelo or “Vungu” as Biti would say. It was convenient to invite Tsvangirai, then secretary-general of Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions to lead the party.

Ncube had an opportunity to lead when the MDC split in 2005 on an issue many now accept he was right on and Tsvangirai wrong. At that point, the faction invited an exiled former student leader Arthur Mutambara. Mutambara brought rocket politics that flew over grassroots and lost Ncube and his party seats in Parliament.

When Ncube finally took over from Mutambara at congress, it is said repeatedly that he was humiliated time and time again by Tsvangirai and Mugabe who took Mutambara under their wings during the tea and pancake sessions for GPA principals. Mugabe refused to make the Vunguman the Deputy Prime Minister of the Republic. Cry my beloved tribe. He took it in his stride and waited for his day in Maputo for revenge.

Many Zimbabweans generally agree that Ncube has the quality to be a President but just like Peter Kenneth of Kenya, many think he can not win.

This is why Maputo was important for Ncube.

When he rose to the occasion, he is said to have delivered a compelling legal case against what Mugabe had done. It was his MDC’s position, as given in Education minister David Coltart’s communication before the summit that a timetable allowing the full 30-day voter registration and inspection of voters’ roll. His party has always called on due legal process to be followed and for the Constitution to be respected while the MDC-T has emphasised on pending GPA reforms rather than process.

So when the Sadc leaders listened to Ncube and saw Mugabe pause, it would have been a great relief for Ncube. When Biti told the world what he had done in the summit, Ncube had at last earned the respect to be considered as an equal. It is unlikely that Tsvangirai will continue shunning Ncube in the GPA meetings, but seek to work with him.

When in 1999 many Zimbabweans realised that Joshua Nkomo a great leader they should have voted for, it was too late to change the course of history. Likewise, when the true story of the Sadc Summit is told one day, many Zimbabweans will reflect and realise that at times, the tribalised politics may leave us with inadequate leaders.

Unfortunately for Ncube, it will take another five years for some Zimbabweans to be tribe-blind. He will be an important player and now a respected politician. The people in Murambinda and Chendambuya will not see his brilliance and capabilities because the Sadc Summit goings-on will not be televised.

Tsvangirai supporters now emphasise his tribe and origin by calling him “Save,” to quench the voters’ tribal thirst. You have to give it to him, our dear PM. It is likely that even if the MDCs unite, it is Tsvangirai’s face that will be tied onto tree barks and pasted on dilapidated factory walls.

Ncube may have to accept that not many with our PM’s level of education or lack of it and his unique face have achieved what he has in life. I am sure his mother would have told him that he was the most handsome boy in the village. Confidence is everything in politics. He who believes, wins. Maputo speaks to what is possible. — NewZimbabwe.com

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