Tuesday, March 31, 2009

State beefs up Tsvangirai security

March 30, 2009


Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai

HARARE (AfricaNews) - Security around Prime Minister of Zimbabwe Morgan Tsvangirai who recently survived a horrific car crush that claimed his wife Susan, will be bolstered this week.

A state of the art ambulance, a lead police car fitted with a beacon to warn off other motorists will be allocated to him, sources at his office at the weekend have said.

The sources said all has been put in place for the beefing up of his security when traveling anywhere in Zimbabwe.

This came after Tsvangirai’s office wrote to State Security Minister, Sydney Sekeramayi, requesting that the Prime Minister’s security be tightened following the death of his wife in a road accident three weeks ago.

At present, Tsvangirai travels in a three-car convoy consisting of a truck in front, his official maroon Mercedes Benz in the middle and another truck making up the rear.

But security analysts say this is inadequate for a person of his stature. Retired army colonel Martin Rupiya, who is in charge of the Prime Minister’s security, confirmed Tsvangirai’s office had been in contact with relevant government departments over his security. But he would not be drawn to disclose details of any proposed new measures to improve security.

“We’ve been in touch with the responsible people in government and hope that measures will be taken to address this issue (security) with the urgency that it deserves,” said Rupiya.

Sekeramayi refused to take questions on the matter because it was “a security issue which should not involve the media or ordinary people”.

Tsvangirai’s wife Susan died shortly after the car she and her husband were traveling in was struck on the side by a truck that veered onto their lane along the potholed Harare-Masvingo highway.

Their vehicle, a Toyota Land Cruiser, reportedly rolled three times before landing on its roof. Susan, Tsvangirai’s wife of 31 years, was thrown out of the car and sustained heavy injuries in the process. She was pronounced dead on arrival at a hospital.

A raging battle between Tsvangirai and President Robert Mugabe for control of the power-sharing government the two formed last month quickly fed speculation over the car crash.

A long history of deaths of prominent political figures in mysterious road accidents only helped exacerbate suspicions over the accident; while many Zimbabweans say this fatal accident could have been prevented had Tsvangirai been traveling with an escort as a Prime Minister should.

Tsvangirai decries rate of road accidents

March 29, 2009

Deputy Prime Minister Thokozani Khupe - mother buried.

By Our Correspondent


DPM Thokozani Khupe

BULAWAYO - Prime Minister and MDC president Morgan Tsvangirai says he is worried by the number of accidents involving people associated with his party.

Speaking at a church service held in Saursetown, Bulawayo, on Sunday before the burial of Deputy Prime Minister, Thokozani Khupe’s mother Catherine Mabhiza, Tsvangirai said he was troubled by the rate of the accidents.

Mabhiza died Thursday morning at Arcadia Hospital in Pretoria, South Africa. She was admitted there for treatment following a fatal car accident along the Harare-Bulawayo Road on February, 10 2009. The deputy Prime Minister’s aide, Timond Dube, perished in the accident.

Mabhiza sustained head injuries.

Susan Tsvangirai, the wife Prime Minister, died in a car crash on March 6 along the Harare-Masvingo Road. Another person was killed in an accident in the vicinity of the Tsvangirai accident while travelling back to Harare from Susan Tsvangirai’s funeral in Buhera.

More recently, two MDC ministers Gorden Moyo, the Minister of State in the Prime Minister’s Office and Samuel Sipepa Nkomo, the Water Resources Minister, both of the mainstream MDC, were involved in a minor accident when their Mercedes Benz was struck from behind by another vehicle as they were driven to Harare International Airport. The vehicle overturned and its three occupants were rushed to hospital.

“I am very troubled at the fast rate at which accidents involving the leadership of the party are happening,” Tsvangirai said. “It never rains but it now pours for us. Our loved ones are going.

“These two deaths (Mabhiza and Susan Tsvangirai’s) should not weaken us but should strengthen us, as a party in government and as Zimbabweans.

“The most painful thing about our mother’s death is that it was caused by an accident which occurred when she was travelling to Harare to attend the inauguration of her daughter as Deputy Prime Minister.”

Tsvangirai returned to Zimbabwe last Tuesday from a period of rest and recuperation in South Africa after he sustained head and neck injuries in the accident which killed his wife.

Tsvangirai has ruled out any prospect of foul play being the cause of the accident. The state of disrepair of Zimbabwe’s road network, vehicle defects as well as human error have been blamed for many accidents.

After the church service and body viewing Mabhiza was laid to rest at West Park Cemetery adjacent to Mpilo Hospital where thousands of MDC supporters were in attendance.

Also present at the burial was the Speaker of Parliament Lovemore Moyo, who thanked the government for providing food for the mourners. The funeral was attended by members of the MDC national executive members and cabinet ministers.

The ministers included Eric Matinenga (Constitutional and Parliamentary Affairs), Nelson Chamisa (Information and Technology), Murisi Zvizvai (Deputy Minister of Mines), Gordon Moyo (Minister of State in the Prime Minister’s office) and Sam Sipepa Nkomo (Water Resources).

Zanu-PF officials and ministers were also in attendance. They included party chairman and Minister in President’s Office John Nkomo, Webster Shamu (Media, Information and Publicity Minister), Obert Mpofu (Mines) and Andrew Langa (Deputy Minister of Tourism).

Also present were Matabeleland South governor, Angeline Masuku, Zanu-PF politburo member Sikhanyiso Ndlovu and Zimbabwe Defence Industry boss Tshinga Dube, who stood for Zanu-PF in Makokoba Constituency in last year’s parliamentary elections.

He lost to Deputy Prime Minister Khupe.

Gono has expired like a zimdollar


Gono holding an expired zimdollar

My first question is if the zimdollar has expired ,then why is Gono still in the office?I have watched with keen interest as squabbles about the relevence of Gono in the new dispensation.Gono might have been useful in the past,but I feel he is not relevant in the new dispensation,he is actually a hindrance to the blooming of our once beautiful Zimbabwe which seems to be coming back to life againist all the odds.This is a fact without trying to favour any political party.Everyone knows that its time for Gono to go for the good of the nation.It would be helpful for the nation at large if he step down and watch as the events unfold from the terraces.Reserve bank now wants a clean professional with proper experience for the job.If the President so much wants him,they can make him a political commissar for ZANU PF.He has proved excellent in fly by night economics,or guerilla kind of financial administration.Zimbabweans have suffered enough Mr Gono,we kindly ask you to be gentleman enough,swallow your pride and accept that you have had your time.Your refusal to step down is costing us many lives through cholera and poverty and therefore for the sake of our beautiful Zimbabwe do something Pronto Mr Gono,Sir.

DITSHWANELO 9th ANNUAL HUMAN RIGHTS FILM FESTIVAL 2009

SECOND WEEK: 27 MARCH – 3 APRIL 2009 MARU A PULA SCHOOL
The 9th Annual Human Rights Film Festival of DITSHWANELO – The Botswana Centre for Human Rights is now in its second and last week. Speakers for the week include Member of Parliament Dumelang Saleshando, Mrs Mokone, The Deputy Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Communications, Science and Technology, and Mr Thapelo Ndlovu, The Media Institute of Southern Africa - MISA (Botswana Chapter). All films continue to be screened at The AV Centre at Maru a Pula School.
The themes for this week include the foreign policy and practice of The United States of America and how it has directly affected countries in Latin America; the life story of Wangari Maathai, a Kenyan environmentalist and the first African woman Nobel Peace Prize winner; the suppression of the media in Burma; the story of a Sudanese child soldier; the experiences of a priest in his role of preparing people on death row, for their execution and the lives of Ugandan children who are living through war. The Festival was officially opened by Minister Skelemani, Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation on Thursday 19 March 2009 at The AV Centre, Maru a Pula School.
Earlier speakers included Mr Madoda Nasha (UNHCR), Mr Tshepiso Molapisi (Kast) and Mr Thobo Kerekang (Magosi) and South African film Director Mr Steve Mokwena.
Tickets cost P25 per day and are on sale at Riverwalk Mall and at Maitisong. The proceeds of the ticket sales will go towards the work of DITSHWANELO.
We would like to take this opportunity to thank our sponsors – Maru a Pula School, Riverwalk Shopping Complex Mall, Yarona FM, Flemming Asset Management Botswana, Khan Charitable Trust, Shell Oil Botswana, UNHCR, UNICEF, Cyberplex Africa and individuals.

27 March 2009
Gaborone

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Tsvangirai returns home, to open tourism conference

By Michael Chipato

Posted to the web: 24/03/2009 23:36:05



PRIME Minister Morgan Tsvangirai arrived back home at noon Tuesday after a brief compassionate leave following the death of his wife in a road crash on March 6.

Tsvangirai and his family spent a week in South Africa’s port city of Durban as guests of the South African government.

The Prime Minister is set to begin work on Thursday with two major engagements. He will officially open a two day conference to map strategies for reviving the country’s tourism industry before chairing a Council of Ministers meeting.

Tsvangirai arrived home as prices started to fall after years of devastating inflation that left the national currency nearly worthless - a rare piece of good news for an economy that remains a shambles.

Prices of goods bought in U.S. dollars - Zimbabwe's new official currency - declined by 3 percent since January, the state statistical office said Tuesday.

Until the Zimbabwe dollar became virtually obsolete in recent weeks, Zimbabwe's last official inflation rate in the local currency was given as 231 million percent in August, by far the highest in the world.

Moffat Nyoni, head of the Central Statistical Office, said items priced at an average of $100 (euro73) in January cost $97 (euro71) this month.

No official annual U.S. dollar inflation figure was calculated, Nyoni told reporters. And the situation is complex, because dollars are not readily available. But some Zimbabweans get money from relatives or friends working abroad, and the government recently began paying civil servants in dollar vouchers.

Tsvangirai is expected to send a bullish message to the world that Zimbabwe is open for business and tourists at the opening of the tourism conference in Harare which will run under the theme "Deepening Partnerships for the Revival of the Tourism Economy."

The government announced a short term economic revival strategy called STERP last week. It identifies tourism as a key sector.

Tourism and Hospitality Industry Minister Walter Mzembi said: "This conference seeks to realign stakeholders in the tourism industry to the STERP. Tourism is expected to provide a soft landing for the new economic blueprint.

"The industry needs significant investment. I believe that tourism and its minister is the public relations face of the country. The most attractive product we have is inclusivity and celebrating diversity.

"The country’s image has been under a barrage of cyberspace attack through negative publicity which includes travel warnings, yet we have very peaceful and co-existent destinations.”

Under STERP high-level teams will be dispatched to different countries to reflect a positive image and potential of the country, as well as removing the country risk perceptions entrenched in source markets and consequently lobby for the removal of travel warnings.

Zimbabwe is also keen to capitalise on next year’s Fifa World Cup – and Tsvangirai will emphasise the need for Zimbabwean companies to intensify programmes to promote soccer tourism

Zimbabwe's inflation down to -2.3 percent

Posted to the web: 24/03/2009 14:19:27

ZIMBABWE recorded a monthly inflation rate of -3.1 percent in February and -2.3 percent in January after the government revalued its currency and allowed the use of foreign currencies, official figures showed on Tuesday.

The Central Statistical Office (CSO) did not release a yearly figure.

The southern African country is grappling with a severe economic crisis and has allowed the use of foreign currencies to tame hyper-inflation.

The latest official data released in October showed inflation soared to an all-time high of 231 million percent year-on-year in July from 11.2 million percent the previous month.

Finance Minister Tendai Biti last week projected inflation would fall to just 10 percent by the end of this year as the use of foreign currency helps to stabilise prices.

Zimbabwe's unity government between President Robert Mugabe's party and the MDC of Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai has launched an economic recovery programme that envisages political reforms aimed at winning back stalled Western donor aid. - Reuters

Hopes rise as Zimbabwe's stricken engine sputters back into life

http://www.timesonline.co.uk

The Times
March 25, 2009

The power-sharing Government is only five weeks old, but to everyone's
surprise it has made an electrifying difference
Jan Raath
It sent a jolt of delight through me. A small crowd had gathered to look. A
garbage truck. Men in orange Harare city council overalls, shovelling into
it heaps of fly-blown, stinking, rat-infested refuse that had been
accumulating for about five years.

The next happy shock was the dozen men and women in reflective yellow vests
with machetes, hacking down the 3m elephant grass on the road verge. And lo,
nearby, were four shiny new tractors with mowers, turning a suburban eyesore
of rank, mosquito-laden weed into parkland.

And then there was the glory of freewheeling down the steep slope to the
West Road traffic lights and encountering a team of council workmen next to
a trailer exuding the delicious aroma of hot tar. It was like a ballet as
they patted and stamped gravel and bitumen into the potholes that had
cracked the sumps and buckled the rims of hundreds of vehicles.

There have been only rare glimpses of the Harare council maintenance
department since 2000. But Zimbabwe's power-sharing marriage is just over
five weeks old and, to everyone's surprise, it has made an electrifying
difference. Suddenly, up there and running the Government, alongside the
malevolent and apparently indestructible President Mugabe, is Morgan
Tsvangirai, the Prime Minister and champion of the people.

His first move was simply to dump Robert Mugabe's joke currency and allow US
dollars and other convertible currencies to circulate freely. Immediately it
unjammed a multitude of cogs in the nation's stricken engine. The infusion
of just a little real money has enabled the Harare city council to make a
modest start on the worst of the decay left by the shameless Mugabe, his
ministers and officials.

It has brought sporadic life to my home telephone after years of dead
silence. The dialling tone, when it comes, still gives me a little shudder
of pleasure.

The long, anxious bread queues outside the Greek store up the road are gone
and the empty shelves, which Iannakis tried to disguise with cabbages six
weeks ago, are filled with eggs, cigarettes, fruit juices, milk, soap,
sausages, chocolate and any kind of beer you want. So fast have the US
dollar and the South African rand become established in the past five weeks
that he can usually give change in notes and sometimes even coins, instead
of handing out boiled sweets or bananas in lieu of cash.

Best of all, his irregular, elderly heartbeat no longer has to bear the
panic of central bank inspectors descending on the shop to catch him
illegally selling his paltry merchandise for real money, and squeeze out a
bribe to look the other way.

And prices are dropping as goods abound and competition asserts itself. "I
bought sugar for US$1 for a kilo, half of what it cost me in January," said
Langton, who works as a gardener down the road. "Bread and mealie meal are
cheaper now. It is all because of PM." You mean the Prime Minister, Morgan
Tsvangirai? I asked. "PM means Papa Morgan," he said. It was a touching
endearment, such that Mr Mugabe could never hope for.

Other windows are opening too. With a lump in my throat, I walked into the
lion's den last week and presented myself at the main government office for
an interview with Mr Tsvangirai's Finance Minister, Tendai Biti. Six weeks
ago the receptionist would have summoned a pair of wolfish spooks to deal
with a brazenly white journalist. Now the man politely showed me the way.

I visited a friend, an aide of Mr Tsvangirai and long on the Central
Intelligence Organisation's hate list. I was surprised to see him working
with stationery bearing the official coat-of-arms of the Zimbabwe
Government. An arrest warrant would have been the only official document he
was allowed to see before.

On the day that Mr Tsvangirai's wife Susan was buried, I was behind a
minibus and watched the conductor stick up an MDC poster on the back window.
Not long ago it would have got a brick through it.

January promised another black year of misery and despair under Mugabe's
brutal failed state, but the presence of Mr Tsvangirai and his colleagues in
the new Government has provided a sunburst of hope for Zimbabweans, as they
seize on the marginal changes that have acquired such highly charged
significance.

The sense of optimism is alive, but after the repeated violent destruction
of expectations of the past decade people have also learnt to recognise the
fragility of their hope. It's like walking into a pool of delicious, cool
water while knowing that broken glass lies on the bottom.

"Nothing has changed," Mr Mugabe said during his grotesque 85th birthday
celebrations last month.

Ask Israel, the rose vendor, who last week had to flee from police raiding
"illegal" traders outside the nearby supermarket. Their sole purpose was to
steal the goods that the traders abandoned.

Or the young man in Tongogara Avenue who took too long to pull to the side
of the road when the president's 25-vehicle motorcade went hurtling past
last week and got the usual treatment - he was dragged out of his car by one
of the escort's soldiers, then kicked and beaten with a rifle butt in front
of scores of onlookers.

Monday, March 23, 2009

MDC-UK Leadership returning to Zimbabwe

The Leadership of the MDC-T in the United Kingdom and Ireland are returning to Zimbabwe, The Zimbabwe Observer has learnt. Contacted for comment Mr Jonathan Chawora, the chair person confirmed that he and other members of the leadership were travelling to Zimbabwe tonight to consult with the national leadership on policy issues and the way forward.

Other members that are travelling to Zimbabwe with the chairperson include the secretary Mr Sakile Mtombeni and the information and publicity Officer Mr Mathew Nyashanu. Asked by The Zimbabwe Observer if their return was permanent and the possible dangers of their return, Mr Chawora said they were only travelling there for a two week period and they plan to return to the United Kingdom after this period. "We are taking a risk going to Zimbabwe and we do not know how we are going to be received by the authorities there".

The return to Zimbabwe of the MDC-UK Leadership follows in the heels of the return of the MDC UK & Ireland Chief Representative Mr Hebson Makuvise, who is currently in Zimbabwe since the formation of the all inclusive government in February this year. The return of the MDC-UK leadership may introduce a new dimension to the approach by the British Home Office to asylum applications from Zimbabwe.

The bulk of the applications made by Zimbabwean asylum seekers are based on the fear of persecution for being members of the MDC. The return of the MDC -UK leadership may send signals that Zimbabwe is now a safe destination following the formation of the Inclusive government.

The United Kingdom policy towards asylum seekers from Zimbabwe -and especially towards returning to Zimbabwe those whose applications have been refused - has for a number of years proved contentious.
For nearly three years from 2002 the UK did not return failed asylum seekers to Zimbabwe. This policy was revoked in November 2004 and, in 2005, 260 Zimbabwean failed asylum seekers were removed from the UK. In the summer of 2005, dozens of Zimbabwean asylum seekers in the UK staged a hunger strike and their cases were considered in the Asylum and Immigration Tribunal (AIT) and the High Court. The Government stated that it would not change its policy on removals, but the Home Office confirmed on 14 July 2005 that removals would be suspended pending a judicial review hearing in the High Court.

At that hearing, on 4 August 2005, Mr Justice Collins adjourned three test cases on the legality of returning failed asylum-seekers so that the AIT could look at new evidence of conditions in Zimbabwe. In the light of the court's decision, enforced removals of failed asylum-seekers continued to be deferred and detention was reconsidered individually.

The Government says that each asylum application is dealt with on its own merits; the most recent figures (for 2007) indicate that 19% of initial decisions on asylum claims from Zimbabweans resulted in the applicant being allowed to stay in the UK, either as a refugee or with discretionary leave. The leading case on returns to Zimbabwe is now that of RN (promulgated in November 2008), in which the AIT concluded that the risk of persecution on account of imputed political opinion was no longer restricted to those perceived to be members or supporters of the MDC.

The Government has recently (February 2009) indicated that there is 'no barrier to restarting returns for failed asylum seekers to Zimbabwe and that 'those found not to be in need of protection and who have not left the UK voluntarily can expect to be returned'. The return of the MDC-UK leadership which served as a buffer in the past for failed asylum may see the government actively returning Zimbabweans who have failed to convince the british government of their need for protection in their asylum applications.-The Zimbabwe Observer

Zimbabwe's ICT guide 2009 - Part 1


Information Communication Technology Minister - Nelson

USA - SAN JOSE — Information and Communications Technology (ICT) is an umbrella term that includes all technologies for the manipulation and communication of information.

Information Communication Technology Minister - Nelson Chamisa
GENERAL - Lets talk about everything and anything you want to say.

He was speaking to ICT stake holders in Harare recently.

It was an important stance by the Hon Minister in so far as top level awareness that something needs to be done to bridge the digital divide in Zimbabwe.

Zimbabwe already has thousands of websites that are either hosted locally in Zimbabwe or outside the country.

So it’s not so much about the need of a national website per se but rather a broader surgical approach to the ICT challenges that we face.

The digital divide or gap is set to widen even further if we don’t take it upon ourselves to come up with specific solutions for our specific challenges.

Problem resolution at this level, calls for a sober, firm and accurate understanding the variance between what is on the ground and what needs to be achieved.

Any half baked attempts to address the digital divide or gap will not only waste resources and opportunities but literally take the nation a few decades backwards in terms of development.

A sound ICT policy impacts all sectors of the country from the economy through health right up to mining and farming.
In this article I will offer a bird’s eye view of key issues that impact and affect digitalization efforts. Hopefully this will help the ICT leadership clarify, categorize and prioritize delivery mechanisms.

Zimbabwe just like most African countries basically faces a number of hurdles in order to roll out effective computing technologies to the general population. Rollout issues and challenges do include but not limited to;

- cost of computers and equipment
-inadequate access technologies (data & voice)
-inadequate electricity
-poor national & international bandwidth
-regulation and licensing
- Censorship and control
-brain drain & lack skilled manpower & I.T. certifications
-poorly designed and optimized websites
-egov

In this article I address some key elements that affect internet penetration and telephone usage. You will note that the main factors that affect telephony also affect data communications.

ICT has challenges in both the data and voice arenas. When we talk about bridging the digital divide we seek to reduce or eliminate entry barriers that the people face in both data and voice. A number of terms will be used loosely in both areas.

It is important however, for the ICT ministry to be able to dissect and separate common issues and independent issues that affect data and voice.
This approach is necessary so that the issues are addressed at a root cause level. We seek to deal with the root problem like inadequate infrastructure manifested symptomatically as congestion or slow connections.

Voice and data networks are fast converging and this calls for a smart unified communications approach whose success hinges on reliable, fast and robust network infrastructure.

Internet Access

In Zimbabwe just like most African countries most people who access the internet do so via Cyber cafes, colleges, varsities, work place an some at home.
The limiting factors are basically cost and unavailability. Most urban dwellers either can’t afford it or the ISPs serving them are out of capacity as discussed further below.

There are people who own farms who could easily afford it, but can not do so from where they are because there is no network coverage of one form or the other in their area.

As a result internet penetration is very low due to a number of issues. One of ICT’s core tasks is to help present operators unclog their stuffed networks and also adopting the concept of cyber cafes for many communities whose chance of using a computer or accessing the internet are next to none.

Donating computers to schools is great.

More could be done in the form of setting up computer centers at libraries, district offices, ALL colleges using the cyber café approach.
This has the advantage of also spinning some business to the struggling ISPs.

Hopes are hinged on the 3G data access. All I can say for now is that we hope Econet will not make it an elite service for the business brass.

Last year when I was in J’oburg I was pretty impressed about how easy it is to connect to the internet MTN’s 3G using a USB dongle with a 3G capable SIM card. Because right now in Zimbabwe before we even have 3G, is it possible to walk to a distribution shop and buy a SIM card?

Telephone Access

Teledensity is a metric that is used to broadly estimate the number telephone lines per 100 individuls. Presently Zimbabwe has a teledensity of about 3 .This means that there are about 3 telephone lines per 100 people. This figure heavily depends on the accuracy of the actual number of telephone lines divided by the total population.

Now this is a very tricky estimation as millions of Zimbabweans have left the country while mobile operators have availed more lines. The teledensity metric has been used as an indicator of economic development or governance.

Current voice providers include Telone , NetOne , Econet , Telecel. Now wireless usage in Zimbabwe has indeed enabled many people a means of communication. Wireless growth rate is highest in Africa because cellular phones offer any one within coverage range an equal opportunity to communicate.

At this stage Zimbabwe has serious complications that basically point to a collapsed economy. Cellular operators have managed just to stay afloat in a very un-business like environment.

This has made it impossible for the operators to increase both capacity and coverage at a time when spares and maintenance were made in hard currency whilst end users were paying in a currency that long lost its value.

Stabilization of the economy should allow cellular companies to increase their coverage to more areas.



Cost of computers, equipment and software

Computer and internet penetration is very low in Zimbabwe due to the cost of owning a PC or MAC and the cost of having an internet connection.
What is needed in this area is for the stake holders to identify equipment manufactures that can supply Zimbabwean market PCs in bulk and at competitive rates.
Secondly in most developed nations people throw away their PCs just to get a new one.
Most of these PCs are recyclable easily and the Ministry can setup collection centers in the US and UK to pick these PCs – clean them up and store them in a container before shipping them to Zimbabwe. This is already being done in Kenya and Ghana.

Thirdly the ministry should encourage local companies to team up with PC manufactures and open up assembly plants in Zimbabwe.

This should be one of ICT’s long term plan and has bankable off shoot benefits like job creation, local availability of PCs , generation of forex through exports and generation of revenue for the state via the taxman.

The more people have access to PCs whether publicly via schools, libraries or internet cafes the better. One way of doing this is availing mobile digital libraries. Take an old ZUPCO bus.

Refurbish it , install like 30 computers in the bus and pull a diesel powered generator at the back. These obile libraries are used in Rwanda to visit remote areas with no PC access.


Windows based software is generally pricy because of licensing fees. The ICT ministry must encourage and even fund open source software initiatives in Zimbabwe.
This literally means that refurbished computers that are shipped into Zimbabwe can run on free BUT extremely loaded Linux based like uBuntu.

Ubuntu is a community developed operating system that is perfect for laptops, desktops and servers. uBuntu comes loaded with thousands of FREE open software applications like word processing, spreadsheets, presentations, databases, web servers, email servers, fax servers , call centers, phone billing , internet café billing, hotel reservation, project management, programming tools, educational and scientific software and many more.

Cost of software as a stumbling block in ICT development can not be used as an excuse.

Friday, March 20, 2009

Sibanda needs Tsvangirai to rescue him

March 20, 2009


Morgan Tsvangirai (L) and Gibson Sibanda in happier days.

By Our Correspondent

HARARE – The Minister of State in the Deputy Prime Minister’s Office, Gibson Sibanda has to secure a seat in Parliament within two months or risk losing his Cabinet post. Sibanda, who is the vice president of the smaller MDC party, was the last person to be sworn into office as Minister of State. By then all the non-constituent seats that were allocated to the Arthur Mutambara-led MDC had been taken up.

According to Section 31 E of the Zimbabwe Constitution, every minister or deputy minister must either be an MP or a Senator when appointed or become one within three months of appointment. Sibanda has already been in office for a month.

Mutambara himself was allocated an ex-officio seat in the House of Assembly on appointment as one of two Deputy Prime Ministers, while Prof Welshman Ncube and Priscilla Misihairabwi-Mushonga took up the other two seats in the Senate allocated to their party.

That left Sibanda in a quandary and facing the real prospect of losing his ministerial post. Sibanda lost his Nkulumane parliamentary seat in the March legislative polls last year. He was defeated by mainstream MDC youth chairman Thamsanqa Mahlangu, who is now Deputy Minister of Youth.

The embattled Mutambara MDC is said to have approached Siyabonga Malandu Ncube, who was elected to Parliament on its ticket in Insiza constituency to relinquish his seat in favour of Sibanda so as to save the party’s deputy president the embarrassment of losing the ministerial post he miraculously secured after enduring heavy defeat in the elections.

Ncube apparently refused to play ball.

Edward Mkosi Moyo, Bulilima MP was reportedly also approached. He was offered the position of provincial governor if he surrendered his seat to Sibanda. He too is reported to have decided to hang onto his parliamentary seat.

Informed sources say the Mutambara MDC party was now considering pleading with the mainstream MDC to donate one of its non-constituent seats. While the mainstream MDC party has four seats available to it in the Senate only three of its deputy ministers are without seats.

Deputy ministers Dr Tichaona Mudzingwa, Sesel Zvidzai and Roy Bennett will take up three of the four Senate seats, leaving the MDC free to choose one more Senator for appointment. Mutambara hopes to plead with Tsvangirai for that seat in return for greater collaboration in Parliament.

However Tsvangirai is said to be under such pressure to appoint someone from among the dozens of his loyalists who failed to get a position in the inclusive government. He is said, therefore, to be unlikely to cede the seat that Mutambara desperately needs.

The beleaguered Sibanda was Tsvangirai’s deputy president in the MDC until October 12, 2005, when he and secretary general, Welshman Ncube, information secretary, Paul Themba Nyathi and treasurer, Fletcher Dulini Ncube walked out on Tsvangirai to form a party of their own in Bulawayo. They named it the MDC and invited Mutambara who was based in South Africa to return home and lead the new party.

Mutambara was walloped in Chitungwiza in the March 29 elections; so were all his lieutenants in Bulawayo.

He is now also said to be exploring the prospect of entering negotiations with Zanu-PF which also has an extra seat in the Senate. There is only one Zanu-PF deputy minister without a seat, Aguy Georgias who will presumably take up one of the two Zanu-PF Senate seats.

Mutambara was also said to be exploring entering fresh negotiations with the other party principals to expand Parliament to 315 members. Already Parliament has been expanded by 11 more members to accommodate election losers and hangers-on, expanding its size from 303 members to 314.

There were 210 members in the House of Assembly but there are 214, now while the Senate has been increased from 93 members to 100 Senators.

Constitutional law expert Lovemore Madhuku said the law clearly states that Sibanda has three months to regularise his legislative issues otherwise he ceases to be a minister three months from the day he and other deputy ministers took oath of office.

“He has to have his papers and formalisation process sorted out before the end of three months or else he will lose his cabinet post,” Madhuku said.

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

The long, hard road to break free of an old regime

http://www.theglobeandmail.com

On the one hand, Zimbabwe's new 'inclusive government' is already making an
impact: reopening schools, cutting food costs. On the other, Mugabe's party
still maintains a grip on the central bank, the media and the judiciary.
Foreign donors are conflicted.
GEOFFREY YORK

From Monday's Globe and Mail

March 16, 2009 at 4:45 AM EDT

HARARE - Zimbabwe's youngest cabinet minister is unapologetic about the new
Mercedes-Benz that he drives as he navigates the pothole-ridden streets of
this impoverished capital.

In a country where three-quarters of the population are dependent on foreign
food aid, a Mercedes is a luxury of almost unimaginable proportions. But the
fleet of expensive sedans was quickly accepted by opposition activists such
as Nelson Chamisa who were elevated into Zimbabwe's new unity cabinet last
month.

Mr. Chamisa, 31, says he is cheered and celebrated by ordinary people who
see him in his luxury car. "It's a symbol of authority and power," he says.
"If you don't have it, people will think you don't have power. They feel
good when they see one of their own in power."

In truth, many Zimbabweans have questioned the costly limousines that were
adopted by their new cabinet ministers. But it's also true that the new
government has given a sense of hope and optimism to the vast majority of
Zimbabweans for the first time in years.

While the autocratic Robert Mugabe remains President, long-time opposition
leader Morgan Tsvangirai has become Prime Minister and fully half the
ministers in the new cabinet belong to his Movement for Democratic Change.

The new "inclusive government," as it is known, has racked up some
impressive achievements already. It has given wages to teachers and
soldiers, halted the world's worst inflation rate, dumped the worthless
Zimbabwe dollar and replaced it with foreign currency, cut the cost of food
by issuing new retail licences and boosting competition among grocery
stores, reopened schools and hospitals that had been closed for months and
freed many of the activists who had been imprisoned by the old regime.

Yet the ZANU-PF party of Mr. Mugabe has kept a tight grip on key
institutions such as the military, the judiciary, the central bank and the
state media. It continues to imprison many opposition activists, violating
the unity agreement. Not a single person has been prosecuted for the
estimated 200 deaths inflicted in a wave of brutal attacks on the opposition
last year.

Suspicion and paranoia are still rife. When a car crash injured Mr.
Tsvangirai and killed his wife Susan this month, many Zimbabweans assumed it
was a plot by the state security agents who are supposed to be guarding the
Prime Minister, despite Mr. Tsvangirai's statement that it was an accident.

Even after entering cabinet, Mr. Chamisa was unwilling to be seen talking to
a foreign journalist, with state spies watching everywhere, so he drove his
Mercedes to a private home for his interview with The Globe and Mail.

Mr. Mugabe himself has boasted that he is "still in control" of the new
government. The MDC says it is waging a tough battle inside the government
to weaken the grip of the President's loyalists. Reforms have been further
delayed by the death of Mr. Tsvangirai's wife, a major blow to the MDC
leader.

"This is going to be a very slow and painful process," says Alec
Muchadehama, a prominent human-rights lawyer who defended many of the
opposition members in court after they were imprisoned last year.

Only about half of the 40 activists who were abducted and imprisoned last
fall have been released so far, he noted. "ZANU-PF will continue to do what
it wants, as if nothing has happened, to show that they're still in
control," he says.

"They did not willingly enter the inclusive government. They had no choice,
because things had gotten so bad. There were no salaries, no water, no
electricity, and soldiers were looting. There would have been chaos very
soon. They desperately wanted the MDC to fix it by getting international
money. Mugabe is the biggest beneficiary."

Foreign donors are sympathetic to the new government, but they are
hesitating to give anything more than humanitarian aid until they are
convinced that it has broken free from the old regime. "Some of us - most -
are very skeptical," says a well-placed Western source in Harare. "It's a
conundrum for us."

The international donors, who are meeting in Washington this week to discuss
a strategy to help Zimbabwe, are considering a compromise aid package that
would provide wage subsidies to "top up" the salaries of Zimbabwe's nurses
and teachers for the next four to six months.

"This government is Zimbabwe's best chance in 20 years," the Western source
said. "If we don't help them, the government will fail. That's what we
believe. The risk is enormous. The cupboard is bare - there is nothing."

In fact, MDC insiders confirm that the financial crisis is mounting. The new
government is receiving only $10-million a month in tax revenue, while its
payroll costs and other expenses amount to $100-million a month.

The International Monetary Fund and the World Bank have sent a mission to
Zimbabwe for the first time since 2006 to see whether conditions are right
for major loans to the new government. Analysts expect that it will signal a
willingness to help.

The Canadian government, for its part, is reluctant to send financial aid to
Zimbabwe because it is not a "country of focus" under a new federal policy
that gives preference to 20 developing countries around the world. But
Canada instead could send consultants or advisers to strengthen the new
government, which is so impoverished that it doesn't even have Internet
access in its ministries.

Before Western donors agree to help the new government, they want assurances
that it will respect human rights and get rid of old Mugabe cronies such as
central bank governor Gideon Gono, the man who fuelled the world's highest
inflation rate by printing huge amounts of banknotes in denominations of up
to 100 trillion Zimbabwe dollars.

Mr. Gono remains defiant, still entrenched in his central bank stronghold
and showing no sign of leaving. But the MDC has slashed his control of state
revenue, halting his gold sales and abolishing the retail licence fees that
previously went to the central bank. "We've cut Gono's legs off," a senior
MDC official says. "We'll get his scalp. There's no doubt."

The official, speaking on condition of anonymity, says the ZANU-PF loyalists
are trying hard to sabotage the unity government. "But we are not going to
withdraw from the deal, no matter what happens," he says.
"The Prime Minister's office is increasingly in charge. It's like the
beaches of Normandy - we're occupying a beachhead, and now we're fighting
our way inland. It's like hand-to-hand combat."

Company who own Tsvangirai 'killer' truck suspend administrator

http://www.swradioafrica.com

By Lance Guma
16 March 2009

The company who own the truck involved in the crash which killed Susan
Tsvangirai, has suspended one of its administrators, after it turned out the
vehicle was not driven by one of their drivers. The truck was carrying AIDS
drugs for a project funded by the United States Agency for International
Development (USAID).

A report by the weekly Standard newspaper says John Snow International (JSI)
is the contractor for this AIDS project and they issued a confidential memo
3 days after the accident, stating that although the truck belonged to them
it was not driven by a JSI driver on the day. The new revelation will no
doubt raise further questions over whether the crash which claimed the life
of Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai's wife, was an accident or an
assassination attempt on his life.

According to the newspaper the JSI memo says; 'As you may have heard, there
was a tragic car accident on Friday (March 6) in Zimbabwe in which the Prime
Minister (Morgan Tsvangirai) was injured and his wife was killed. The
vehicle involved in this accident was registered to USAid/Deliver (a JSI
Project) although not driven by a JSI driver, as far as we know. At this
point, further details about the accident are unknown. Understandably, this
tragedy has generated a lot of media interest. If you receive any inquiries
from the media, we ask that you please direct them to Penelope Riseborough,
WEI/JSI Director of Communication in Boston.'

The focus has now shifted to how the suspended administrator, a woman in
charge of the delivery trucks and known only as N. Dube, could have
dispatched the vehicle without a JSI driver. She is now the centre of an
internal investigation by the company. A source who spoke to the Standard
newspaper said; 'The administrator has been quizzed on how the truck was
released laden with SCMC (Supply Chain Management System) drugs but with an
unofficial driver. If it was coming from delivery in Masvingo it should have
been empty,' they said. So far JSI have said; 'We cannot at this time make
any comment on the detail of the accident but we are co-operating fully with
the authorities to ensure the investigation is open and transparent.'
Last week the United States Embassy in Harare issued a statement clarifying
the ownership of the truck saying it 'was purchased with USAID funds by a
contractor and belonged to the contractor.' Many in the ZANU PF regime,
including independent MP Jonathan Moyo, immediately seized on the
opportunity to demand 'an international investigation into the activities of
USAID in Zimbabwe'.
USAID have provided US$260 million for emergency programs since October
2007, in addition to food, health care, safe water, and HIV/AIDS programs.
It would seem highly unlikely that they would have an interest in
eliminating the one man people hope will lead Zimbabwe out of the many
crises created by ZANU PF.
Tsvangirai himself has insisted the crash was an accident, but his
assurances have not stopped the speculation.
Newsreel last week spoke to the Chris Mhike, the lawyer of the driver of the
truck. He said his client hit a hump and lost control of the truck before
hitting Tsvangirai's Land Cruiser. But our correspondent Simon Muchemwa, who
has since visited the scene of the crash, insists there are no humps on that
stretch of road. His comments are corroborated by Deputy Mines Minister and
MDC legislator Murisi Zwizwayi, who also visited the crash scene, and who
also said there are no potholes or humps. 'It's just a clear road,' he
remarked.
At Mrs. Tsvangirai's funeral last week some of the songs sang by the
mourners blamed Mugabe and his party for the crash. In the absence of a
thorough investigation, questions will continue to be raised.

No evidence of Botswana training camps

http://www.thezimbabwetimes.com/?p=13476

March 15, 2009

By Tanonoka Joseph Whande

GABORONE - Botswana's Foreign Affairs Minister says no evidence of terrorist
training camps has been presented to the authorities in Gaborone to support
allegations made last year by President Mugabe's government.

Phandu Skelemani said the allegations of so-called camps where saboteurs
were receiving training to distabilise Zimbabwe were nothing but "distorted,
manufactured and generalized accusations which were not backed by tangible
facts".

The allegations were made during the Extra-Ordinary Summit of the Organ
Troika of SADC Heads of State and Government on October 27, 2008, in Harare.
The SADC Organ on Politics, Defence and Security Cooperation then mandated
an investigation to be conducted, a report of which would then be submitted
to the Ministerial Committee of the Organ.

"To the best of my knowledge, the team completed its investigations both in
Zimbabwe and Botswana late in December 2008," said Ms Leefa Penehupifo
Martin, speaking on behalf of SADC's Executive Secretary Tomaz Salomão. "I
am not sure it has reported back to the commissioning authority that is the
Ministerial Committee of the Organ Troika. As such, we have no clue of the
content of their findings."

Asked what SADC itself had to say since there were still people being
incarcerated or prosecuted in Zimbabwe on charges relating to terrorism
training in Botswana, she responded, "We are not privy to the evidence nor
to the incarcerations you are alleging."

Dozens of people were abducted for having been involved in such training or
of assisting such trainees. They included human rights activist Jestina
Mukoko and former Tsvangirai aide Gandhi Mudzingwa. While the majority were
granted bail two weeks ago a few are still being held, some in unknown
locations.

Andrew Makoni, a lawyer for some of the abductees told reporters in Harare
on Thursday that from October 2008, when the abductions started, to December
at least 31 people had been kidnapped.

"Twenty-two, including a two-year old baby, have now been accounted for but
the whereabouts of the others are still unknown," he said.

He said it was no longer known if the missing were still in police custody
or had disappeared completely.

Skelemani told The Zimbabwe Times Friday that Zimbabwe's accusations had
been put to Botswana for her response.

"Botswana totally rejects the unsubstantiated allegations which were made
and are clearly nothing more than an exercise to engage in acts of
intimidation and harassment of the innocent people of Zimbabwe," he said.
"The Zimbabwean authorities will do themselves good by releasing those
people."

Asked when the investigation would close and if Botswana would be happy to
let the accusation die without publicly addressing the accusations levelled
against the country by Zimbabwe, the minister said, "That is for the SADC
Organ Troika to determine as they were tasked to investigate the matter.
Botswana awaits the feedback from the SADC Organ Troika on this matter.

"We have expressed our concern about the undue delay in determining this
issue."

Skelemani went on to say that, generally speaking, Botswana's position on
Zimbabwe had not changed. He said it remained the official position of the
government of Botswana that, in the event of the Global Political Agreement
being rendered unworkable, a re-run of the presidential election should be
held under international supervision.

Three days ago, Botswana President Ian Khama told the Financial Times that
Botswana had not always agreed to "this sharing of power", just like they
didn't agree to the Kenyan model either because they felt that what should
be done on the continent was to ensure that credible elections were always
held.

"This power-sharing thing is a bad precedent for the continent," Khama said.

Asked to state Botswana's official view on Zimbabwe's Government of National
Unity and whether satisfactory progress was being achieved, Skelemani said:
"The inclusive government formed in Zimbabwe has, to some degree, addressed
the crisis of legitimacy in that country and this is a welcome development.

"Botswana had hoped that all the parties in government would seize this
opportunity and genuinely work towards the rehabilitation and reconstruction
of the country's economy. Regrettably, some elements in government, notably,
Zanu-PF, continue to encourage and engage in irresponsible acts and make
provocative statements which are likely to discourage the international
community from extending a helping hand to Zimbabwe for the benefit of its
long suffering people."

At the SADC Secretariat Martin said, "At the risk of sounding banal, I wish
to state for a fact that the Zimbabwe government of national unity was only
inaugurated on February 13, 2009, which is less than a month today and, in
my opinion, it is exceptionally too short a period by any measure to assess
anything less complex, let alone a government of national unity."

Early last week, Zimbabwe's Minister of Social Welfare, Pauline Mpariwa,
officially opened the Plumtree Reception and Support Centre, the second of
its kind which has been established in Zimbabwe by the International
Organisation on Migration (IOM) to provide humanitarian assistance to
irregular (illegal) Zimbabwean migrants being deported back home. The first
centre was established in Chiredzi.

"We look at the centre as an important facility which will help in the
documentation of returnees and therefore should provide data as maybe
needed," said Botswana's Labour Minister, Lethlogonolo Siele, during the
opening ceremony.

Asked if the opening of this transit camp in Plumtree was an indication that
Botswana still expects continuing traffic of illegal migrants into the
country, Skelemani said: "The difficult economic conditions in Zimbabwe are
still there. As long as this remains the case, people will continue to cross
the border into Botswana to seek opportunities for a better livelihood."

Could he cite any issue in particular that Botswana was not happy about with
regard to the current situation surrounding the Zimbabwe government?

"Yes," said Skelemani, "the continued detention of MDC activists, which can
only serve to undermine implementation of the Global Political Agreement and
efforts to attract international goodwill and the much needed economic,
financial and technical assistance for the rehabilitation and reconstruction
of the economy of Zimbabwe."

"Zanu-PF should end unilateralism and create an atmosphere conducive to
building mutual trust and confidence as well as to live up to the spirit of
the Global Political Agreement, wherein the parties committed themselves to
bring an end to the polarization, divisions, conflict and intolerance which
have characterised Zimbabwean politics and society in the recent past.

"The continued detention of MDC activists is a sign of bad faith on the part
of Zanu-PF."

Zimbabwe death truck owned by Kasukuwere - Report

Monday, 16 March 2009
JOHANNESBURG - The truck that killed Susan Tsvangirai the wife of the Zimbabwe Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai in a road crash is owned by Saviour Kasukuwere, a former spy agent in the CIO and Youth and Gender Development Minister in the inclusive government, a South African newspaper The Sunday Sun revealed. "Tyson" as he is popularly known, has worked as Robert Mugabe's body guard.
Kasukuwere was one of the first government officials to visit the Prime Minister in hospital at the Avenues Clinic in Harare.
The amazing coincidence of his truck's involvement was revealed in Harare by a private investigator probing the tragic accident that took the life of the Prime Minister's wife Susan.
Kasukuwere has worked in the Zimbabwean government's Central Intelligence Organisation (CIO)'s close Security Unit, a crack department in the spy organisation which reports directly to the President. Its role is to spy on CIO agents and government officials, including Zanu(PF) politicians.
The notorious Mt Darwin MP has a menacing body and menacing looks and a close confidante of the President alongside the Defence Minister Emmerson Mnangagwa and he is normally tasked to carry out ruthless missions on behalf of Robert Mugabe.
Sources say Kasukuwere gained the favour of Robert Mugabe and Emmerson Mnangagwa when he worked for (Central Mechanical Equipment Department (CMED) as a driver and spy agent monitoring the movement and servicing of government officials' vehicles.
Over the years, Kasukuwere has become obsessed with eliminating Zanu(PF) rivals in Mashonaland Central to secure his position as the unchallenged political baron in that province.
It is believed that Kasukuwere drove out Mashonaland Central businessman James Makamba into exile and General Solomon Mujuru who had vast farming interests in the region was sent packing back to his native Chivu.
Tyson is also linked to the death of the province's budding young Zanu(PF) politicians Border Gezi, Elliot Manyika and the recent arrest of former Guruwe MP David Butau on his return from exile in the UK. Butau, like James Makamba was Solomon Mujuru's business front man.
In 2005 he spied on Phillip Chiyangwa, Tendai Matambanadzo, a banker, and Itai Marchi Zanu-PF director of Security, and long-serving Zimbabwe diplomat Godfrey Dzvairo and they were convicted of breaching the Official Secrets Act and given sentences ranging between five to six years in jail on accusations that they sold information to South African Intelligence.
Kasukuwere is also linked to the attempted murder of MDC spokesman Nelson Chamisa two years ago.
In the disputed violent Presidential elections run-off, he directed political assasinations, abductions and torture in Mashonaland Central and engineered attacks on US embassy vehicles.
During his time as a Central Intelligence Organisation (CIO) operative in Manicaland in the Nineties, he was nicknamed "Mike Tyson" because of his ruthlessness and precision in dealing with political foes.
Kasukuwere is a wealthy individual and his youthful brother Stanley had a brief stint as Chairman of Dynamos football club.
In a report by a Zimbabwe Sunday paper The Standard, John Snow International (JSI) "Deliver project" has opened an internal investigation on how the "killer truck" that claimed the life of the Prime Minister̢۪s wife Susan was dispatched last Friday, in a new twist to the accident.
The truck was involved in an accident with Tsvangirai's car on Friday.
The Supply Chain Management System (SCMS), is the contractor of the "USAid/Deliver Projects" aimed at strengthening HIV/Aids and family planning supply chains in developing countries run by JSI.
According to the official JSI website the "Deliver project" helps developing countries "establish effective and efficient supply chains for public health and family planning programmes".
A confidential internal memorandum in the possession of The Standard, dated March 9 — three days after the accident — said the truck belonged to JSI but was not driven by a JSI driver.
"As you may have heard, there was a tragic car accident on Friday (March 6) in Zimbabwe in which the Prime Minister (Morgan Tsvangirai) was injured and his wife was killed.
"The vehicle involved in this accident was registered to USAid/Deliver (a JSI Project) although not driven by a JSI driver, as far as we know. At this point, further details about the accident are unknown.
"Understandably, this tragedy has generated a lot of media interest. If you receive any inquiries from the media, we ask that you please direct them to Penelope Riseborough, WEI/JSI Director of Communication in Boston," the memorandum said.
JSI has launched an internal investigation to unravel how the truck was dispatched under unclear circumstances, leading to the fatal accident along the Harare-Masvingo highway on March 6.
Sources said that an "administrator", identified only as N Dube and in charge of the delivery trucks, had been quizzed by management amid reports that she had been sent on suspension pending investigations.
The administrator was not at work when The Standard visited JSI head offices at Agriculture House in Marlborough on Friday.
"The administrator has been quizzed on how the truck was released laden with SCMC drugs but with an unofficial driver. If it was coming from delivery in Masvingo it should have been empty," the source told The Standard.
It was not immediately possible to get details of the whereabouts of the administrator because of the blanket ban on talking to the media.
David Alt, the JSI̢۪s country director, was locked in meetings when The Standard visited JSI headquarters. He did not respond to written questions on the alleged suspension of the administrator.
However, late on Friday afternoon JSI released a statement in which it said: "We have learned with great sadness about the death of Susan Tsvangirai in a tragic accident on Friday afternoon. We cannot at this time make any comment on the detail of the accident but we are co-operating fully with the authorities to ensure the investigation is open and transparent.
"We send our deepest condolences to the Prime Minister and his family at this terrible time and hope they find peace and comfort in the coming weeks."
Prime Minister Tsvangirai and his wife were being driven in a Toyota 4x4 Land Cruiser to their rural home in Buhera, when they were sideswiped by the Nissan UD truck driven by Chinoona Mwanda (35). The PM̢۪s Land Cruiser was forced into a spin rolling over at least three times, killing his wife Susan.
Mwanda̢۪s colleagues told The Standard he had been sent for "rehabilitation" but no one is saying where or for how long. They also said other staff at different sites had been recalled and operations put on hold.
Its website says John Snow Inc. and its no profit affiliate JSI Research & Training Institute Inc, are public health research and consulting firms dedicated to improving the health of individuals and communities throughout the world.
"JSI builds local capacity to address critical health problems, collaborating with local partners to assist countries, governments, communities, families, and individuals to develop their skills and identify solutions that meet their public health needs.
"Through management assistance, research and evaluation, education, and training, JSI works to enable agencies and health professionals to provide appropriate services in an effective and compassionate manner."
JSI, says the website, has implemented projects in 102 countries, and currently operates from seven US and 38 international offices, with 1100 host country national field-based staff.

The Zimbabwe Mail/The Sunday Sun (SA)/The Zimbabwe Standard

Monday, March 16, 2009

Tsvangirai Flies Out To S.Africa

Tsvangirai Flies Out To S.Africa
http://www.radiovop.com


Harare - Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai left the country Sunday for
South Africa with his family to rest and mourn the death of his wife.

Tsvangirai went with all his six children. He travelled to South
Africa at the invitation of the South African President Kgalema Motlanthe.
Just a day after the horrific accident which claimed his wife
Tsvangirai also travelled to Botswana to receive proper treatment and rest.
His spokesman James Maridadi confirmed that he had travelled to SA
with the rest of his family.
"He left in the morning with the rest of his family for South Africa
to rest," said Maridadi.
Tsvangirai's family appealed to the media and MDC supporters at the
funeral wake of the passing on of Susan Tsvangirai last week that it will
need time to mourn their mother and allow their father to fully recuperate
before resuming his duties as leader of the government. Tsvangirai"s eldest
son Edwin said the family would need some quite time away from the public
glare.

You Can blame it on the Culture of Violence

http://www.thezimbabwestandard.com/


Saturday, 14 March 2009 15:42
ZIMBABWEAN history is blood-spattered. In the 19th century, the
so-called Pioneers - in reality a bunch of fortune-seeking brigands - raided
this country, pillaging and killing the natives.

But in 1980, the descendants of the natives had turned the tables on
the sons and daughters of the Pioneers - the land was returned to the
original owners as Zimbabwe - after much bloodshed.

But the habit, or tradition or culture of violence was not dissipated,
either by prosperity or the spiritual upliftment of full nationhood.

The new rulers killed and subdued any of their kith and kin who dared
to protest at the hard-fisted manner in which they were running the new
country.

It may come as a shock to many but what solidified the pursuit of
violence as a method of pacification was the struggle for freedom.

Once the fruits it yielded were discovered to be sweet - freedom and
the apparent right to the unfettered pursuit of happiness - the temptation
became irresistible to try it again and again.
Every time the people were perceived to be resisting the will of the
rulers, it was violence which was invariably resorted to rather than
dialogue.

The two political groups engaged in the struggle - PF Zapu and Zanu
PF -were ideologically Marxist-Leninist, albeit with varying degrees of
faith in violence as an instrument of cementing the gains of the revolution.

Both were backed to the hilt by two of the largest communist countries
in the world - the Soviet Union and the People's Republic of China.

Both had achieved triumph through the use of violence, even against
their own people.

In the Soviet Union, a slogan used during the reign of Josef Stalin
was: "to make omelette, you need to break many eggs".

Millions were killed before what was viewed as the "ideal state" of
the revolution was achieved.
China was no different during Mao Zedong's reign to that populous
country under the control of one man - The Great Helmsman - took the
slaughter of millions.

In Zimbabwe, the dream of a Marxist-Leninist state, as once publicly
envisaged by Robert Mugabe, is dead and buried.

The use of violence, a vital stock-in-trade of the ideology, may have
given rise to the initial suspicion of foul play in the road accident which
killed Susan Tsvangirai.

There have been many deaths of prominent people in road accidents
since 1980: William Ndangana, Sidney Malunga, Border Gezi, Tsitsi Munyati,
Chris Ushewokunze, Zororo Duri, and Elliot Manyika to name a few.

There has never been any tangible evidence that any of these accidents
involved a "black dog". Yet the suspicion has persisted that, to eliminate
their foes, those in power may not have hesitated to use such stage-managed
incidents to achieve their ends.

Morgan Tsvangirai was quick to eliminate foul play as the cause of the
accident in which his wife died and he himself injured. But it is almost
inevitable that people will continue with the speculation.

In the new Zimbabwe, political violence as employed in
Marxism-Leninism to -as it were - "maximise" allegiance of the people to the
ruling elite - must be eliminated.

Many previously diehard communists perceived the fatal flaws in
communism long before Mikhail Gorbachev's ground breaking denounciation in
the 1980s.

One was Doris Lessing, a member of the Communist party in Southern
Rhodesia in the early 1940s. The 2008 Nobel Prize Winner for Literature came
to this country with her British parents when she was five years old, having
been born in Persia in 1919, when her father worked there.

In Volume Two of her autobiography, Walking in the Shade, published in
1997, Lessing writes: "Why was it that anywhere near the Party, facts became
twisted, people said things which you knew - and they must have known -were
untrue?

"The Devil is described as the Father of Lies, a resonant phrase,
suggesting other older phrases, like 'Real of Lies'. I have come to think
that these is something in the nature of Communism that breeds lies, makes
people lie and twist facts, imposes deception.

What is this thing? This force? One cannot believe one word that
emanates from a communist source.
"Communism is indeed a real of lies. Stalin, the great deceiver, was
only partly responsible, because it was Lenin, the exemplar, who provided
the blueprint."

Curiously Lessing was declared a prohibited immigrant in Southern
Rhodesia in 1949. She has lived in England since then and has visited
Zimbabwe many times.

She has recently revealed turning down an honour from the Queen. She
would have been called Dame Lessing or something.

Her reason? She fought against the British Empire and was damned if
she was going to become a "Dame of the British Empire".

It too had entrenched the habit, culture of violence, like the
communists.

Wsaidi20022003@yahoo.co.uk

Sunday Opinion with Bill Saidi

Saturday, March 14, 2009

Simbarashe Chirimubwe's life under threat

Local Zimbabwean activists and friends in Botswana claims that Simbarashe Chirimubwe's life is in danger after they heard some people planning to attack him at his residence ,this supports another report which has been brought earlier that a group of some Zimbabweans were following and monitoring him.Some have even gone on to search employment where he works for effective monitoring of his life.Others are threatening to attack relatives of the activist,however finer details have been withheld to facilitate a thorough investigation of these allegations.


The crime which is being claimed by the perpetrators is that he supports and is an activist of the MDC leader Morgan Richard Tsvangirai .However Simbarashe Chirimubwe has taken the allegations with a pinch of salt because according to him "what is wrong with supporting the MDC leader,is he not a Zimbabwean?After all the GNU is now in place.The GNU symbolizes unity and progress amongst Zimbabweans,its a golden chance for us to forge ahead as a family.Zimbabweans have suffered for too long and this is an answered prayer because no political party has won,but the Zimbabweans themselves.Its an opportunity for President Mugabe to build his name and reclaim his position as the father of the nation,not a political party.I have observed that the opposition supporters are ready to forgive him and accord him his position as the father of the nation.Prime Minister Tsvangirai's humble and forgiving character has played a major role ,hence the need to cultivte it in the whole nation.President Mugabe speech at Mrs Susan Tsvangirai's funeral made me to realise that he also has feelings and can be very loving as a father.Mr President ,your Zimbabwean children misses that,in the early 1990's when i used to follow President Mugabe's biography they used to emphasise that he loved children and they loved him.Where is that heart of an angel,Mr President,Zimbabweans have scattered everywhere in search of fatherly love,some got it ,but others are still wallowing in trenches and churches as refugees in other nations.I am even touched with Prime Minister's words to you"Baba mwana wenyu aenda,zvangitikawo".Mr President what more love and respect do you want??? Zimbabweans misses that love and patriotism.President Mugabe is now the head of the state and hence the need to bring together all and sundry towards rebuilding our nation as a family.Brothers and sisters do not worry Zimbabwe will rise again,this time better than ever and I will be there .My greatest wish though if it were to be granted was for President Mugabe to leave a united Zimbabwe,with no hate,violence and intolerance.Our children and grandchildren will be grateful for the last effort goodwill,Mr President. God bless Zimbabwe"

By John Mutongi

Accident or not, MDC must let the dust settle

http://www.swradioafrica.com

Tanonoka Joseph Whande

I pray that Mai Tsvangirai rests in peace.
I pray that, for the sake of the nation and no longer for himself and his
family, Mr Tsvangirai has the courage to emerge from this disaster with the
same determination that he had before this tragedy occurred.
I pray that the Prime minister maintains or regains his focus.
Susan Tsvangirai stood by her husband through a lot of trying times and,
indeed, she died sitting next to her husband.

It is my hope that Mr Tsvangirai recognises that he and Mai Tsvangirai were
no longer 'private' people but belonged to the nation and, to that extent,
people will always talk about what happened or didn't happen.

Forgive me, I beg you.

Zimbabweans have endured a lot over the decades.
The death of Susan Tsvangirai is one of several warnings our nation has
received since independence and this does not, in any way, mean that her
death might not have been an accident.
It means that, once again, we are jolted to the realities of life.
Because, in some cases, the death of a good person unwittingly strengthens
or assists the bad.

I salute Mr Tsvangirai for his sheer energy, for his open wish to see
Zimbabwe regain its lost glory. I admire him for accepting, against much
criticism, embracing Mugabe.just for the sake of the nation.

Tsvangirai's sincerity and humility could not have been more apparent than
when he groaned and struggled to sit up in his hospital bed to greet Mugabe
who had come to see him.
I felt some revulsion to see Grace Mugabe shedding a tear or two and was
reminded of Mugabe kneeling before Levy Mwanawasa's widow.
Tsvangirai struggled up and reportedly said to Mugabe, "Baba, mwana wenyu
waenda. Zvakangoitikawo." (Father, your daughter is gone; it was an
accident).
I was unable to keep down my own tears as I watched the scene on television.
Had Tsvangirai felt wronged, it would have been clear. He had lost a wife
and had barely come out with his own.
But he maintained his cool and respect. I salute him.
Mugabe had, of course, brought in television cameras with him.

Now, I want to purposely digress and say to Mr Mugabe that there comes a
time when a man, a father and a leader has to acknowledge shame.
There comes a time when, given all that life has given you, you say thank
you and you sit down and watch the people you have weaned and liberated
enjoy the legacy of your efforts.
In your case, Mr Mugabe, you should have taken time out to enjoy what you
did for Zimbabwe.
You are now throwing handfuls of sand into the good food you cooked for the
nation.

It is unfortunate that today, you interfere with what your people want to do
for you.
It is regrettable that you, yourself, have no sense of time.
Your ideas, intentions and manners have become a burden to the nation.

You are selfish, Sir, and I say to you that you are being unkind to the
nation for denying us the opportunity to thank you for what you did for us.
You continue to deny us the respect that we should willingly bestow on you.
You make us orphans for, regardless of your forced presence, we are orphans;
we don't have a president. Not at all, Sir.

I am ashamed to be taking a cue from you who use burial ceremonies of other
people's children as platforms to embarrass us in the eyes of our community
and the world.
However, well-intentioned, you have become too synonymous with funerals,
Sir.
It appears as if your favourite captive audience is a funeral congregation
unavoidably brought together by what you have recently coined "the hand of
God".

Since the days of the liberation struggle, car accidents have been
synonymous with ZANU-PF, whenever it wanted to get rid of a foe or of one of
its own political children.
Car accidents with trailers sideswiping a victim's car or hitting badly
parked trucks litter ZANU-PF's history.
Today, our suspicions must be forgiven but understood.

Josiah Tongogara died under as still unexplained circumstances when his car
allegedly hit a military truck parked by the roadside.
After his death, ZANU-PF released an undertaker's statement saying his
injuries were consistent with a road accident, but no autopsy results or
pictures were released.

After independence, many of our compatriots active in politics died in
mysterious car accidents.

Interestingly, Mugabe's last three Political Commissars all died through
highly questionable road accidents.
Eliot Manyika perished in December 2008 after his Mercedes Benz sedan
reportedly overturned.
"A tyre on the official Mercedes-Benz in which Cde. Manyika was travelling
burst, resulting in the driver losing control," said the official report.
"The vehicle veered off the road then rolled. He was pronounced dead on
arrival at Mater Dei Hospital in Bulawayo."
The man Manyika had replaced as ZANU-PF Political Commissar, Border Gezi,
also died the same way.
"The Mercedes-Benz burst a tyre, resulting in the driver losing control,"
said the official report. "The vehicle then rolled once and veered off along
Masvingo Road on Saturday morning April 28, 2001. He was pronounced dead on
arrival at Mater Dei Hospital in Bulawayo."

Maybe the Mercedes Benz Motor Company should sue Mugabe and ZANU-PF for
tarnishing the image of their product.
Or, conversely, ZANU-PF should sue Mercedes Benz for killing its officials.
Surely, Benz vehicles can't just burst tires and overturn, killing Mugabe's
people?

And now our Prime Minister has barely come out alive from a car accident
that claimed his wife's life.
After the accident, the MDC said that they wanted an independent
investigation of the accident, implying that they were suspicious of the
accident.
But early this week, in a now familiar MDC flip-flop, the Prime Minister
himself told the press that it was, indeed, an accident.

The Prime minister's advisors should have allowed him to face the press only
to assure the nation that he was on the road to recovery and not to comment
on the accident itself since it is the subject of a court case.
Although we have absolutely no faith in Police Commissioner Chihuri and his
men, the Prime minister might have pre-empted police investigations.
Granted, the prime minister is an eyewitness to the accident and no one
disputes that.
People necessarily want to know how it happened and what caused it.
This accident is not a family matter; it is a national issue.

The Prime minister's statement that might have helped to calm nerves and
avert possible violent repercussions. I believe it was well intentioned.
We should, however, let the dust settle and then talk. We know that foul
play of this nature is made to appear real.
We are still talking about Tongogara's accident, Sydney Malunga's, Ziyambi
and Samuel Parerenyatwa's accidents.
There was also Ndangana, Duri, Mahachi and many others.

It must have been chilling for Tsvangirai to look up and see the Mugabes,
Emerson Munangagwa, the Director of the Central Intelligence Organisation
and a host of other Mugabe loyalists who had always persecuted him staring
down at him.
Could Mugabe have gone to the hospital to warn Tsvangirai of possible worse
things to come while he was in mourning and while his own wounds were still
fresh?
Could Grace Mugabe really cry in sympathy with Tsvangirai?

Why was the person who took photographs of the scene of the accident
arrested?

Forgive me for being skeptical. I have walked down this road before.
The heart of the matter is that we are now afraid to believe, off hand, such
car accidents.
We have buried so many of our compatriots who died in still unexplained and
mysterious car accidents.
We wonder why such unexplained car accidents only happen at critical times.

Yes, an allegedly drowsy truck driver might have hit Tsvangirai's car but
was that the accident?
Or the accident was that Tsvangirai did not die?

Whether it was an accident or not, none gives us comfort.
You see, I am very suspicious of the executioner who comes to my home to pay
his respects after hanging my kin.
What do you think? Send me your comments on tano@swradioafrica.com
I am Tanonoka Joseph Whande and that, my fellow Zimbabweans, is the way it
is today, Thursday, March 12, 2009.

Monday, March 9, 2009

Botswana attacks Zimbabwe regime

http://www.ft.com/

By Tom Burgis in Gaborone

Published: March 8 2009 17:12 | Last updated: March 8 2009 17:12

Zimbabwe’s power-sharing government is a recipe for “disaster” and sets a
dangerous precedent for democracy in Africa, Ian Khama, president of
neighbouring Botswana, has warned.

Mr Khama, a quad-biking former army chief and the son of Botswana’s
independence leader, has won plaudits for an active reform programme but has
been accused by opponents of using presidential fiat to advance a personal
agenda of “discipline”.
His tough stance on Zimbabwe – a rare exception to many African leaders’
willingness to tolerate autocrats in their midst – has been a crucial prop
to Morgan Tsvangirai and his Movement for Democratic Change, which triumphed
in a first round of elections last March only to withdraw from the
presidential race amid attacks on its supporters.

Following Friday night’s car crash in which Mr Tsvangirai’s wife Susan was
killed, Mr Khama flew Zimbabwe’s injured prime minister for treatment in
Gaborone, Botswana’s capital.

However, speaking to the Financial Times before the accident, Mr Khama said
that he doubted whether Robert Mugabe, the authoritarian president, and Mr
Tsvangirai would be able to work together to rebuild the country’s shattered
economy. Its collapse has unleashed widespread hunger and triggered a
cholera epidemic that has killed some 4,000 people.

“If you had asked me to put together a combination of people who could spell
disaster, that would probably be the combination,” Mr Khama said in his
first wide-ranging interview with a foreign newspaper since assuming office
in April.

Accusing Mr Mugabe of displaying “bad faith and more bad faith” since an
initial power-sharing framework was agreed in September, he said the
85-year-old’s rule had been “ridiculously long”.

After initial successes following the war of liberation Mr Mugabe led,
“every year, and in more recent times, every day he has been in power,
things have just gone from bad to worse … he should have gone, long ago”.

Since Mr Mugabe installed himself for a further term in his 29-year rule
following widely discredited polls, Mr Khama has been a staunch and often
lonely critic of the region’s senior freedom fighter. He refused to
recognise Mr Mugabe’s mandate, lobbied his fellow regional leaders to demand
fresh polls and gave sanctuary to Mr Tsvangiari when his life appeared to be
in danger.

The Mugabe regime responded with unsubstantiated claims that the opposition
movement was assembling militias on Botswana’s turf and a smear campaign
against Mr Khama in the state media. Mr Khama was said to have been livid
when Mr Tsvangirai opted at a January summit to accept the premiership in a
unity government that allowed Mr Mugabe to remain president and his Zanu-PF
party to retain control of the security apparatus, despite the MDC’s failure
to achieve many of its demands.

Mr Khama defended his democratic credentials in the face of critics who
accuse him of governing in a manner more suited to his military past. He
said that, like cholera and an exodus of refugees, the ramifications of the
Zimbabwe deal go beyond its borders. Drawing a parallel with a power-sharing
pact struck amid the violence that followed Kenya’s disputed ballot last
year, he said: “If a ruling party thinks it’s likely to lose, and then uses
its position as a ruling party to manipulate the outcome of the election so
that they can extend their term in power, [it is] not the way to go . . .
this power-sharing thing is a bad precedent for the continent.”

Zimbabwe Mourns Death of Susan Tsvangirai, PM's Wife, In Highway Crash

By Patience Rusere & Ntungamili Nkomo
Washington
06 March 2009


Zimbabweans expressed sorrow and shock late Friday at the death of Susan Tsvangirai, wife of Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai, in a highway crash in which Mr. Tsvangirai was injured, some voicing the suspicion that the collision between the car in which the Tsvangirais were traveling and a tractor-trailer combination might not have been an accident.

There was no immediate statement from Mr. Tsvangirai's Movement for Democratic Change party on the crash and party officials said there were no plans to issue one.

Sources within the party who declined to speak on the record expressed suspicions about the incident in which the articulated truck swerved from the oncoming lane into the three-car convoy in which the Tsvangirais were traveling, clipping their middle vehicle.

Elections Director Dennis Murira of Mr. Tsvangirai's MDC formation gave an account of the crash to reporter Ntungamili Nkomo of VOA's Studio 7 for Zimbabwe.

Differences between Mr. Tsvangirai and President Robert Mugabe over the detention of MDC officials among issues have sharpened just three weeks after the formation of the national unity government formed as a solution to the country's post-election crisis.

Hard-liners in Mr. Mugabe's long-ruling ZANU-PF party are believed to have opposed the formation of the unity government and to be intent upon bringing it down.

Spokesman Wayne Bvudzijena of the Zimbabwe Republic Police, an assistant commissioner, said the crash occurred around 5 p.m. on the highway from Harare to Masvingo.

Bvudzijena confirmed that a truck headed for Harare veered into the lane in which the prime minister's vehicle was traveling and sideswiped the Toyota Land Cruiser. According to Bvudzijena and others the vehicle rolled over three times before coming to rest.

Murira said Susan Tsvangirai was declared dead on arrival at a hospital in Beatrice, south of Harare. He said Tsvangirai sustained only minor scratches and bruises.

But, said Murira, "the devastating news is that he has lost his beloved wife, a woman who was of immense significance to the party, a woman who on several occasions managed to comfort a number of us who were victims of this struggle."

Mr. Tsvangirai was traveling to Buhera, Manicaland province, where he had planned to spend the night and attend a party meeting Saturday at the Murambinda Business Center.

A statement issued by the MDC formation led by Deputy Prime Minister Arthur Mutambara said the party was "shocked and deeply sorry" at Susan Tsvangirai's death, describing her as a "wonderful, warm, down-to-earth mother of the nation."

Earnest Mudzengi, director of the National Constitutional Assembly, told reporter Patience Rusere of VOA's Studio 7 for Zimbabwe that the death of Susan Tsvangirai, 50, was "painful and shocking" coming so soon after Tsvangirai's swearing in as prime minister.

He said he had known Susan Tsvangirai since 2000, one year after the formation of the MDC, and said she was extremely supportive to her husband in his years leading the opposition, especially when he was arrested and badly beaten by police in March 2007.

Mudzengi said he would not venture to say whether the crash was anything other than an accident, but "many people who I have talked to, their first question would be was this not a politically motivated accident" in light of tensions within the unity government.

Ordinary Zimbabweans mourned the death of Susan Tsvangirai.

A Kadoma resident who gave his name only as George said he learned of her death through a text message and said he hopes she will be recognized as a national heroine.

Tawanda Maurise of Mutare said he heard of Mrs. Tsvangirai's death on VOA's Studio 7 and expressed the hope that the fatal crash will not derail the unity government

Friday, March 6, 2009

“Great faith is the product of great fights. Great testimonies are the outcome of great tests. Great triumphs come only out of great trials. Every stumbling block must become a stepping stone, and every opposition must become an opportunity.”
By Smith Wigglesworth

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

The Inaugural Address by the Prime Minister, the Right Honourable Morgan Tsvangirai, to the Seventh Parliament of Zimbabwe

http://www.sokwanele.com/thisiszimbabwe/archives/3500



Mr. Speaker Sir, Vice Presidents, Deputy Prime Ministers, Honourable
Members;

Thank you for this opportunity to address this, the Seventh Parliament of
Zimbabwe, which I trust will be amongst the most cooperative, bold and
decisive in our country's history.

This address to Parliament will outline the legislative vision as embodied
in the Global Political Agreement and will later be following its
presentation to, and approval by, Cabinet and the Council of Ministers.

In the short life of our new Transitional Inclusive Government, I have been
encouraged by the enormous support and cooperation I have received and
witnessed at the parliamentary, ministerial, executive and civil service
levels. If this spirit of teamwork continues, and I have no reason to doubt
that it will not, then together we can rebuild our nation and restore
Zimbabwe to its proud place in the family of nations.

The signing of the Global Political Agreement on 15 September 2008,
signified the soft landing of the Zimbabwe crisis and the commencement of a
process that is irreversible and will lead to a new constitution and free
and fair elections. It signified the acceptance of the reality that violence
has no part to play in our political culture and it signified that the voice
of the people can not be silenced indefinitely.

In this new Transitional Inclusive Government executive authority rests with
the President, the Prime Minister and the Cabinet. As Prime Minister, I am
responsible for overseeing the formulation of government policies and to
ensure that the policies so formulated are implemented by the entirety of
government.

Mr. Speaker Sir, each one of us here today can be justly proud that we have
been chosen by our respective communities in our great country, to represent
their interests and to translate their hopes and dreams into policy that
will make a positive, tangible and sustainable difference to the lives of
those whose trust we have won.

This is not a responsibility to be taken lightly and I know that you will
commit yourselves to ensuring that you are conversant with the duties that
you swore to uphold when you took your seat in this Parliament.

I know that in this House, there are many interests represented, many views
held and many political opinions expressed as to the best way forward for
our nation.

While I welcome this diversity and the robust debate that results from it,
we must always remember that we are united by the principles contained
within the GPA, which has now been given legal form through Constitutional
Amendment No. 19. This Agreement provides a solid and irrefutable framework
for the task that we have to do in the legislature and the leadership role
we have chosen to accept for our people.

The leaders of the three parties represented here, have committed themselves
and their members to adhere to the letter and spirit of the GPA and on this
there can be no difference, dissent or debate.

Parliament has been committed to implementing the clauses of the GPA and
abiding by the Constitution of Zimbabwe. There is no room in this House, in
this Government or in this country, for any individuals or groups that wish
to prevent progress and keep us mired in the poverty and misery that have
come to represent life in Zimbabwe.

Such is the scale of the task ahead, such is the work that we have to do,
such is the support that we shall require from the people, that on this we
must be united, we must work together and we must put the interests of our
nation and our people above all party political considerations.

This is what the GPA asks of each one of us - this is what we, as your
leadership, have agreed to - and this is what shall be done.

__________________

Mr. Speaker Sir, there can be no viable, permanent or sustainable solution
to the problems facing Zimbabwe without the promotion of the people's
freedoms. These freedoms form the bedrock of any democracy and the
foundation upon which all development builds. This is recognized within the
GPA both via the diversity of freedoms it incorporates and the emphasis it
places upon them.

Therefore, during the course of this Parliament a new Constitution will be
written. While Parliament will initiate this process, it must be driven by
all stakeholders and owned by the people of Zimbabwe. The people will have
the final say on its validity, both in terms of process and content, in a
referendum that will be held upon its completion.

This new Constitution will be a truly Zimbabwean product, reflecting our
history, our diverse cultures our respect for one another and our desire to
live free from persecution or fear.

However, there is much work for us to do in promoting freedoms while this
Constitutional process is underway.

Firstly, we must lead by example and the GPA commits all political parties
to respect and uphold the Constitution and other laws of the land and to the
principles of the Rule of Law. In doing this, we must bring to an end the
culture of entitlement and impunity that has blighted our country's recent
history. As leaders we will abide by the rule of law and submit ourselves to
the people for free, fair and transparent election at regular intervals. If
we break the law or lose the support of the people then we do not deserve to
represent them and cannot be members of this House.

With the formation of this Transitional Inclusive Government, all
Zimbabweans are now able to propagate their political views and canvass for
support, free of harassment and intimidation.

The right to freedom of association and assembly are enshrined in the GPA.
It commits the police and other law enforcement agencies to conduct
themselves in accordance with the law and to observe and uphold the rule of
law. The government will therefore undertake training programmes aimed at
empowering these arms of government in the understanding and application of
human rights and the rule of law, particularly as it relates to freedoms of
association and assembly.

Our citizens have the right to express their views to us their leadership.
Therefore, the days of the police wantonly and violently breaking up
peaceful demonstrations and gatherings and needlessly imprisoning innocent
Zimbabweans must now come to an end. In future such activities could bring
the threat of prosecution not only on those arresting or interfering with
such activities but also on those that ordered such interference and
arrests. Command responsibility is a concept we must address and embrace.

No society can be free, or hope to prosper, without freedom of expression
and communication. This too is recognised within the GPA by ensuring that
the government immediately processes all applications for re-registration
and registration of media houses in terms of both the Broadcasting Services
Act as well as the Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act.
Those wishing to practise journalism must be able to do so without being
prohibited by unnecessary restrictions or exorbitant fees.

In addition, steps will be taken to ensure that the public media provides
balanced and fair coverage to all political parties for their legitimate
political activities.

All public and private media must refrain from using abusive language that
may incite hostility, political intolerance and ethnic hatred or that
unfairly undermines political parties and other organisations.

Once an open and free media environment has been achieved, there will be no
need for Zimbabwean radio stations to be based abroad and I would encourage
those running and working for such stations to return home and help us build
a truly free and open communication network in Zimbabwe.

Such concepts of freedom are not foreign to our culture or our continent,
nor are they imposed upon us by outsiders. Evidence of this is clear to see
in our neighbouring countries where the rights of the people are defended
vigorously, where political parties are free to campaign and where there is
a healthy choice of radio and television stations and newspapers to choose
from.

Therefore, the GPA only encourages us to strive and implement the attributes
that exist in our regional African societies.

Naturally, I could not talk about freedoms without referring to those
individuals who continue to languish in prison on seriously contested
allegations. Their guilt or innocence is not for us to decide but it is a
hallowed principle of our law that one is innocent until proven guilty.
These detainees are being punished before they have been convicted. If
indeed there is sufficient evidence supporting the allegations against them
their respective trials must be given precedence in the national interest.
Let a court decide their fate.

The fact that some of these individuals have been incarcerated for months
without trial smacks of political persecution. This will not be tolerated
under our new Government. Justice must be done and must be seen to be done
now.

This issue of justice is not just related to people's freedoms alone but
goes to the very root of the economic recovery programme that this
government intends to implement. As proud as we are as nation, the fact of
the matter is that we need regional and international financial aid to pull
our country back from the economic abyss on which we are poised.

No donor country or institution is going to offer any meaningful assistance
unless our new government projects a positive new image. Brutal suppression,
wanton arrests and political persecution impede our ability to rebuild our
economy, to generate wealth for all, to rebuild our hospitals and schools
and to put a currency of value into our savings accounts.

Thus, those who continue to perpetuate the culture of impunity are
sabotaging the chances of all Zimbabweans to move towards prosperity and
freedom from hunger and poverty.

Not only are they sabotaging these prospects, but they are also going
against the letter and the spirit of the GPA. President Mugabe, Deputy Prime
Minister Mutambara and I, have pledged to work together to implement a full
and comprehensive economic programme to resuscitate Zimbabwe's economy by
addressing urgently the issues of production, food security, poverty and
unemployment and the challenges of high inflation, interest rates and the
exchange rate.

Mr. Speaker Sir, our economic recovery is also dependent on attracting back
to Zimbabwe the millions of our talented and skilled brothers and sisters
who fled the turmoil to seek sanctuary and better economic prospects abroad.
In getting them to return and join us in rebuilding our nation, adherence to
the rule of law and the implementation of sound economic policies are
essential.

As part of this process, the Government will establish a National Economic
Council comprising representatives of all economic sectors and civic society
in Zimbabwe. With the economy, like the other sectors covered by the GPA, no
top-down directives can help solve our problems. Only through engaging with
all stakeholders, by taking advice, learning about the issues and
understanding the complexities of the challenges we face can we hope to
formulate policies that will truly address our economic woes.

In this we have already made a positive start. The open use of multiple
currencies has removed a major distortion from our economy and allowed the
market to dictate a more realistic price for goods and services. In
addition, the achievement by the Ministry of Finance to pay a first round of
allowances to the civil service has eased the harsh conditions under which
these vital employees were living and simultaneously provided a much need
stimulus to our economy.

Mr. Speaker Sir, a government that cares about business has no business
being in business. Rather, its role is to ensure that an enabling
environment exists, albeit regulated, that allows the market to dictate
prices for all goods and services without underplaying the developmental
role of the state. In turn, business must acknowledge its own
responsibilities to pay taxes, provide acceptable employment conditions and
to invest in the growth of our nation.

For our nation to grow, we must ensure that we utilise its natural resources
as sustainably and productively as possible.

Today, our mines are operating at a fraction of their potential, employing a
fraction of the workforce they should and producing a fraction of the
revenue they could. During the life of this parliament, we will put in place
firm policy directions to revitalise our mining sector so that it can
contribute to our economic growth and social recovery.

Mr. Speaker Sir, in the life of this parliament we can make a significant,
positive impact on people's lives if we stay true to the principles to which
we have committed ourselves because our people are hard working and educated
and our country is well endowed with minerals and fertile soils.

However, the economy of Zimbabwe cannot grow and flourish if we are unable
to provide basic services to our citizens. A productive nation is a healthy
nation and this government will, as a priority, ensure that our health
system receives the resources it needs in order to provide the level of
preventative and curative care that all Zimbabweans deserve.

I fear that all of us here today, have lost friends and relatives needlessly
due to the appalling standards to which our health system has been allowed
to decline. I was shocked by my visit to Harare Central Hospital last week
and the conditions that prevail there and throughout the country.

I was embarrassed by the fact that as a nation we could let such
institutions decline while spending large amounts of money on non-productive
incentives for less valuable sectors of the economy. At the same time, I was
enormously proud of the spirit, resilience and dedication of the health
staff that have struggled to provide the best care possible despite the
absence of equipment, medicines, even light bulbs and functioning ablutions.

Our children have been similarly neglected in that we have scared away our
teachers through persecution and wages that fell far below the poverty datum
line, while simultaneously neglecting to maintain our educational
facilities, provide text books or even mark the exams of those children
still able to go to school.

Education is a priority of this government and I commend the work already
undertaken by the relevant ministries in these sectors to get an
understanding of what is required and set about finding resources and
implementing policies that are both practical and viable.

Indeed, like our economic recovery programmes, we cannot hope to restore
basic services without working hand in hand with consumer groups, resident's
associations and civil society as a whole. Forming strong partnerships with
these key stakeholders is essential if we are to rebuild our nation through
the development of sustainable policies for implementation.

I also welcome the moves by those ministries involved in overseeing the
operations of our utility companies to rationalise pricing structures and
implement a short-term moratorium on disconnections to protect the consumer
while realistic pricing structures, in line with regional norms, are
established and implemented. I believe that Zimbabweans will accept these
new rates if they are accompanied by an improvement in the quality and
reliability of the services for which they pay. This government will strive
to find a balance between affordability and viability.

Mr. Speaker Sir, in the same way that this government intends to restore
basic services, so we shall restore our country's ability to meet our basic
food requirements. Like the mining sector, our agriculture sector has been
the victim of negative policy interventions and distortion.

In addition, the collapse of our agricultural production is clear evidence
of what can happen to a vital sector of our economy when the rule of law is
substituted for the rule of lawlessness.

A viable land acquisition and distribution process is essential to redress
the racist land ownership patterns established during the colonial era.

As flawed as the recent process of land redistribution has been, this
government does not intend to reverse it, but rather to institute measures
that will once again see our agricultural sector becoming the jewel of
Southern Africa. To achieve this we need to address the issue of land
utilisation above all else.

We must halt the wanton disruptions of productive farming activities that
are continuing as I speak. Already our food production for the coming season
is going to be less than that of last year's abysmal season. Those that
believe that they can move onto a viable farm and steal the crops that are
about to be harvested are wrong. In our culture, as in our law, you cannot
reap what you have not sown. In addition, those that are undertaking these
activities are threatening seasonal crop production to the value of over
US$150 million - money that our economy desperately needs.

In the GPA we have committed ourselves and our parties to recognising that
all land is used productively in the interests of all the people of
Zimbabwe. A farm is a business that should provide food for our nation,
revenue to our economy and employment for our people.

In line with this, your new Government has committed to, amongst other
things:

a.. conduct a comprehensive, transparent and non-partisan land audit,
during the tenure of this Seventh Parliament of Zimbabwe, for the purpose of
establishing accountability and eliminating multiple farm ownerships.
b.. ensure that all Zimbabweans who are eligible to be allocated land and
who apply for it shall be considered for allocation of land irrespective of
race, gender, religion, ethnicity or political affiliation;
c.. ensure security of tenure to all land holders.
d.. work together to secure international support and finance for the land
reform programme in terms of compensation for the former land owners and
support for new farmers.
This process will go a long way to healing our agricultural sector which in
turn will be restored to its vital role in the economy and future of our
great nation.

However, we cannot hope to progress without looking at healing our nation as
whole. For too long, Zimbabwe has been infected by the diseases of mindless
political violence, intolerance and persecution. Millions of Zimbabweans in
every community have been affected, which is a fact that is once again
recognised and addressed by the GPA.

We all have a role to play in healing our nation. However, we cannot hope to
undertake such a vital task if we do not first acknowledge the causes and
impacts of this disease in an open, honest and transparent manner.

National healing is not an event, it is a process that must be supported by
all Zimbabweans and every community represented in our nation. The treatment
that has been prescribed by the GPA rests on the foundations of equality,
regional growth and development and an environment of tolerance and respect
among Zimbabweans such that all citizens are treated with dignity and
decency irrespective of age, gender, race, ethnicity, place of origin or
political affiliation.

Due to the importance of this process and to ensure that it is encouraged
and supported, the three main political parties in Zimbabwe have each
appointed a Minister of State whose sole responsibility is to oversee the
mechanisms and procedures through which we can begin to heal our ravaged
nation.

This process is not about retribution, instead it is about regeneration,
restoration and rehabilitation and it must have both the grassroots and
leadership buy-in and support.

Only through beginning the process of healing our nation can we move towards
regaining our rightful place in the family of nations.

While in recent years, it is a fact that the relationship between Zimbabwe
and the international donor community has deteriorated, it must also be
recognised that this community has not abandoned the population of Zimbabwe,
remaining significantly involved in responding to the ongoing humanitarian
crisis.

We also have to recognise that Trade relations, particularly with the EU
have not been the subject of any restriction. We have signed an interim
Economic Partnership Agreement with the EU at the end of 2007, and we are
party to the ongoing negotiations leading towards a full Trade Agreement.

What we need is to fully re-establish relationships with the international
donor community, which will be respectful of our sovereignty, not a
relationship essentially based on humanitarian assistance.

We are grateful for the support that this new government has received
already from the international community but we recognize that the onus is
upon us, as citizens of this nation, to lay the foundation for greater
international support, cooperation and integration.

By working together to promote freedoms at home and ensuring that we abide
by the international treaties and conventions that we have ratified as a
country, this would lead to our acceptance by the international community as
a country and as individuals in the family of nations.

I therefore urge the international community to recognize our efforts, and
to note the progress that we make in this regard, and to match our progress
by moving towards the removal of restrictive measures.

Mr. Speaker Sir, addressing the humanitarian crisis remains a focus of this
government. I am pleased to announce that I have appointed Deputy Prime
Minister Khupe as the Humanitarian Coordinator in the Prime Minister's
office. She will liaise with all stake holders in order to compliment the
ongoing coordination efforts and ensure greater efficiency and effectiveness
of our humanitarian response.

Mr. Speaker Sir, we have much work to do but I know that we are up to the
challenge of honouring the letter and spirit of the GPA and ensuring that we
as individuals and as a Government abide by the rule of law and the
Constitution of Zimbabwe.

In this we also have a duty to ensure that all State institutions discharge
their duties impartially, that laws and regulations governing state organs
and institutions are strictly adhered to and those violating them be
penalised without fear or favour and that recruitment policies and practices
be conducted in a manner that ensures that no political or other form of
favouritism is practised.

In this, and in ensuring that all persons are adequately protected within
the laws of the country, we have an opportunity to implement Security Reform
Legislation to enshrine our police as protectors of the rights of the people
and our armed forces as the protectors of our nation.

The first step of this process has already been taken with the passing of
the National Security Council Bill which is now law.

Mr. Speaker Sir, we also have an opportunity to distinguish ourselves as
leaders, not just through the policies we develop and legislation we pass,
but also through the ways in which we conduct ourselves as the elected
representatives of the people.

As a start, I request Mr. Speaker Sir, that you ensure that the mechanism
for the declaration of assets by Honourable Members is enforced.

Going forward, we need to buttress this by additional measures at executive
level to strengthen the fight against corruption through increased
accountability and transparency by all members of our Government.

In addition to requiring Members to declare their income, liabilities and
assets and it would serve as a valuable framework to guide us in the
execution of our duties.

Mr. Speaker Sir, our new government will be open and transparent. We must
ensure that there is clear distinction between the role of the various
political parties and the role of the government. Similarly, we must
acknowledge and enforce the defined separation of powers between this
Parliament and the Executive.

Mr. Speaker Sir, our government cannot fulfill its mandate without respect
and a spirit of cooperation between Ministers and Parliament, both of which
must work together to ensure the needs of the people are addressed.
Therefore I urge all Ministers, in the spirit of openness and transparency,
to actively participate in Parliamentary Question Time and to work with the
Parliamentary Portfolio Committees once they have been constituted.

Also, in this spirit of openness, today we are launching the Prime Minister's
website that will not only serve to keep the people informed about the
activities of our government, but will also provide an interactive forum for
the people to participate and contribute to the affairs of government. The
address of this website is www.zimbabweprimeminister.org.

Mr. Speaker Sir, we must now work together to formulate our legislative
agenda. Those ministries which govern legislation that may be affected by
the GPA and Constitutional Amendment No. 19 should work on reviewing these
laws for presentation to cabinet. The first step in this process will be the
ministerial retreat to be held next week where such reviews can be discussed
in a spirit of cooperation and inclusiveness.

Mr. Speaker Sir, our nation and our peoples have paid the price for the
political differences that have divided us for too long. Now that we have
formed this Transitional Inclusive Government, we all have the opportunity
to put the needs of the people above our own, to put the development of our
nation above party differences and to look the future rather than live in
the past.

Mr. Speaker Sir, Honourable Members, together we can work for the betterment
of Zimbabwe, the growth of our nation and the honour of our people.

God Bless our beloved Zimbabwe and its people. God bless Africa.

I thank you.

Via MDC Press Release

This entry was posted by Sokwanele on Wednesday, March 4th, 2009 at 3:35 pm