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'2 300 new teachers to start work by Sept'

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HARARE - Primary and Secondary education minister Lazarus Dokora has said 2 300 new teachers are set to start work by September this year.

Government had frozen the recruitment of new workers, including teachers and nurses, but the move overburdened the employed few with heavy work load.

In an interview with the Daily News, Dokora said he was not worried about the funds to pay the teachers, considering government is currently struggling to pay civil servants, since he is not the employer.

“All I know is that in September new teachers will be going to schools. The budget and how they will be paid is up to the employer. I do not deal with those issues. I have been public to say I want 7 000 teachers but for now I have been allowed 2 300. Those will join the teaching force in the third term,” he said.

In June, Dokora told legislators that Treasury was yet to approve the recruitment of teachers, who were needed to complement subjects provided for in the new curriculum.

MDC legislator Eric Murai has expressed concern on how schools would cope with teaching new examinable subjects like Agriculture when there was no staff and teaching materials.

“Since last year, I have been requesting for a specific number of teachers, 7 000 in particular, but there is a government policy that I will be given 2 300 initially. I am waiting for the 2 300 to be released by the employer, the Public Service Commission. I am still waiting for such a decision to happen,” Dokora said back then.

“It is true . . . that agriculture has become part of the new curriculum of our nation from Grade Three onwards. It is also pertinent to note that it is not a case that is universal, that there are no teachers who are able to undertake that task. We have in the past indicated that the deployment of teachers we are making now relates to the specialisation that the teachers did go through during their college days. Further, we have collaboration with the ministry of Agriculture to ensure that there is wholesome and holistic treatment of this area of the new curriculum.”

Public Service minister Prisca Mupfumira confirmed that the new teachers would start in the new term.

This comes as government is seeking assistance to fund the implementation of the new curriculum, as available resources will only be disbursed by year-end and to select disadvantaged rural schools.

Deputy Primary and Secondary Education minister Paul Mavhima is on record saying while the contribution by churches in the education sector was great they should continue to chip in through teaching and learning resources.

Teachers unions have said the 2017 school year failed to kick-off smoothly as both teachers and school authorities struggled to implement curriculum.

Progressive Teachers Union of Zimbabwe (PTUZ) said three quarters of the country’s schools do not have electricity and computers, making it difficult to implement the new curriculum.

PTUZ argued that the curriculum was not well-thought out and accused government of being opposed to the provision of equitable and quality education.

“A half-baked, constricted, arid, acidic and rigid curriculum has been introduced in 2017 without adequate resources, consultation and engagement of stakeholders,” the union said.

Among some of the additions to the curriculum is the non-formal education component which was recommended in the 1999 Nziramasanga Commission of Inquiry into education.

Parents have also been wondering if some of the additional learning materials being demanded such as traditional percussion musical instruments, mini-laptops and expensive coloured and plain bond paper were necessary.

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Maziwisa stand triggers land probe calls

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HARARE - Residents groups have called for investigations into land allocations by Harare City Council (HCC) following Highfield legislator Psychology Maziwisa’s request to re-site water pipes that were encroaching into his residential stand.

According to a July 21 letter, HCC’s acting district officer for Highfield wrote to the director of works that Stand number 10607 in Highfield had been allocated to Maziwisa.

In the communication, the unnamed officer requested to have a relocation of the sewer and water pipes.

“The...MP has indicated that there are sewer lines that are criss-crossing in his stand which he says will impede building his residential house,” the letter said.

But the unusual request raised eyebrows, with the Combined Harare Residents Association (Chra) chairperson Simbarashe Moyo demanding that HCC investigates the illegal land allocations that are going unchecked in the capital.

Moyo added that it was shocking that a whole MP would benefit from illegal activities and go on to demand drastic and costly changes that affect the well-being of thousands of residents.

“We have also learnt that a community borehole near the area where . . . Maziwisa was allocated his housing stand will be removed to allow the Member of Parliament to build his house. We have been reiterating that corruption and abuse of power is largely responsible for land invasions and illegal land allocations in Harare hence our call for the responsible authorities to ensure sanity prevails in the capital city,” Moyo said.

Harare mayor Bernard Manyenyeni told the Daily News that management was looking into the matter.

However, council employees say if Maziwisa’s request goes through, there will be major alterations of other developments nearby.

“Everything would have to be re-designed because of what he wants and that is not only costly but also time consuming considering the services to be provided are urgent,” said one employee who preferred anonymity.

Contacted for comment, Maziwisa refused to answer saying he was in meetings all day.

He did not respond to texted questions.

Barely a month ago, council municipal police were deployed to Monavale Vlei after shacks had been erected by a group of invaders who had refused to vacate the international environmental site claiming to have “authority from above”.

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Council rehires Wellcash Debt Collectors

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HARARE - Harare City Council (HCC) has re-hired Wellcash Debt Collectors (Wellcash) in their quest to maximise revenue collection, as ratepayers owe the local authority over $650 million.

HCC terminated Wellcash’s contract following outrage by hard-pressed residents, who argued that they were being fleeced by the debt collector who charged an extra 10 percent on bills.

The residents also complained that their payments to Wellcash were not credited to their accounts.

This saw residents’ pressure group — Combined Harare Residents Association — holding intensive campaigns to stop the debt collectors, urging the residents to pay directly to HCC.

In response, a full council meeting held in May 2017 resolved to terminate Wellcash’s contract.

In a statement yesterday HCC said: “The City of Harare would like to advise residents and ratepayers that it has reengaged Wellcash Debt Collectors with effect from August 10, 2017.

“Ratepayers are encouraged to comply with all the payment plans they entered with Wellcash.

“Those who may not be able to fulfil their obligations are requested to visit Wellcash offices at the head office or respective district offices to renew or renegotiate payment plans.

“Ratepayers are encouraged to make payment plans with the City of Harare to avoid debt collectors.

“A payment plan that is adhered to does not attract interest charges.

“Our emphasis is on dialogue. Let us talk to each other. Let us team up to make the Sunshine City shine.”

HCC spokesperson Michael Chideme yesterday said the city’s revenue had been declining since disengaging Wellcash.

“Our finances were going down from the time we disengaged the services of Wellcash,” he told the Daily News.

“Everybody has seen reason that we need to collect what is due to the local authority, you will appreciate that we are owed over $650 million by our customers countrywide, so we have reengaged Wellcash.

“This time around, we are urging our customers to co-operate and where they have issues they should raise them with council and they will be resolved.”

The city says Wellcash brought in more than $3, 3 million directly, while a further $20 million due to council was paid to council by residents who were served with letters of demand.

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Anderson Limbani passes on

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HARARE - Anderson Limbani, father to the Associated Newspapers of Zimbabwe (ANZ) managing director, Sharon Samushonga, has died.

He collapsed at his home in Ruwa on Thursday evening and passed on a few minutes later before he could be rushed to hospital by an ambulance crew that had been called by his family to take him to a Harare private hospital.

He was 83 years old.

Mourners are gathered at Stand Number 7014 Pungwe Street, ZimRe Park, Ruwa.

Reacting to Sekuru Limbani’s sudden death, ANZ chairman Professor Norman Nyazema, expressed his grief and sorrow at the unexpected development, describing him as a father-figure, grandfather and friend to all who came across him.

“On behalf of the ANZ board, management and staff and, indeed, on my own behalf, I wish to extend our deepest condolences and a sense of shock to Sharon Samushonga and her family and the Limbani family on the sudden passing on of Sekuru Limbani,” he said.

“We sincerely pray to God that Mrs Sharon Samushonga be given courage during their period of bereavement. May the Almighty let Sekuru Limbani’s soul rest in eternal peace,” he added.

In a statement issued on behalf of the ANZ management and staff, Jacob Chisese, the chief operating officer, said the entire team at the country’s trailblazing media house received the news of Sekuru

Limbani’s passing with a deep sense of shock.

“On behalf of management and staff of the ANZ, I wish to express our deepest condolences to the Limbani and Samushonga families, particularly to our managing director, Mrs Samushonga and her family on the sad passing on of Sekuru Anderson Limbani,” said Chisese.

“We sincerely pray that God will give them courage and strength during their bereavement and they should find solace in that God allowed Sekuru Limbani to be with them for the many years that he survived on earth. May God rest Sekuru Limbani’s soul in eternal peace.”

Details of his burial will be announced in due course.

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'Top officials behind Mutodi's coup plot'

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HARARE - Vice President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s ally, Energy Mutodi, who is facing charges of undermining the authority of the president and causing disaffection among members of the defence forces, was yesterday further detained after police convinced the court that some big shots were behind him.

In his ruling, Harare provincial magistrate Elisha Singano said it was justified for police to continue detaining the Zanu PF activist.

“It is the court’s considered view that the offence may have been committed within the jurisdiction of this court, here in Zimbabwe. There is a nexus between the accused person and the alleged postings and police are still analysing the Facebook page and other material, which may have been used in committing the offence.

“The court will allow police to bring cogent facts for remand purposes as there is a genuine reason why they need more time. It is a good reason since it can show if the accused person was acting alone or in cahoots with other people or if someone else was abusing his Facebook account. A further detention is therefore warranted,” ruled Singano.

Mutodi, who was arrested on Thursday night, spent yesterday locked up and will today appear before the Harare magistrates’ courts as his case drags on.

He was arrested after he wrote on his social networking wall, Facebook, that Zimbabwe risked a coup if the thorny succession issue was not resolved amicably, adding that President Robert Mugabe should consult the army to avert chaos.

“While a military takeover may be far-fetched in Zimbabwe, it is important for . . . Mugabe to be careful in naming his successor. Any suspicion of unfairness or discrimination on account of tribalism or factionalism may backfire,” he wrote.

“There are key stakeholders that need to be consulted among them the military and the whole security establishment called the Joint Operations Command that is chaired by vice president Mnangagwa,” he went on.

According to Josphat Chitambira, the police officer who is investigating Mutodi, the businessman caused disaffection among defence forces as defined in Section 30 of the Criminal Law (Codification and Reform) Act chapter 9.23 and also “undermined the authority of or insulting the president as defined in section 33(2)(a)(i) of the same law.

“Investigations carried out so far have established that there is a concerted effort by an organised syndicate of high-powered people, working in cahoots with accused whom we are still working to establish.

“Police are still working with digital forensic analysts to recover additional material from accused’s Facebook account with a view of presenting additional charges,” said Chitambira.

However, Mutodi’s lawyer Beatrice Mtetwa argued that Chitambira could have compiled that information before coming to court and avoided infringing on her client’s liberty rights.

“It’s politicking by the police. There is no legal basis for anything that you have said other than politics. Why are you making reference to high-powered people in your affidavit if you are not a politician? You are trying to rope in the court in your unlawful expedition in violation of the accused person’s rights,” argued Mtetwa.

“A reasonable, seasoned and professional investigating officer would have conducted investigations prior to coming to court. You do not even know the period from which you are seeking additional information. If the accused person opened his Facebook page in 2010 that would mean seven years of posts you have to sift through and if you failed to deal with one post in 24 hours what more seven years of posts,” the human rights lawyer further argued.

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Tshinga Dube disowns war veterans

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HARARE - War Veterans minister Tshinga Dube has distanced his ministry from statements made by Zimbabwe National Liberation War Veterans Association (ZNLWVA) chairperson Christopher Mutsvangwa attacking President Robert Mugabe and his wife, Grace.

Dube told the Daily News on Thursday that the ZNLWVA leadership was out of order and must not drag the whole institution of the war veterans into the mud.

“It’s unfortunate that there were those statements that were widely reported in the private media. The War Veterans ministry does not subscribe to those views. Leaders should be respected and not demonised.

“War veterans should know better. Whoever is saying those things is stating his or her personal views, which are not representative of the view of the war veterans,” the War Veterans minister said.

But the ZNLWVA was quick to hit back at Dube upon being contacted for comment yesterday, saying the War Veterans minister was merely singing for his supper.

“He is a government employee and not our member. When our chairperson spoke, he spoke as the voice of war veterans and not government. Dube is a war veteran; we respect him but he has a job to protect and thus we do not mind what he says,” said ZNLWVA secretary-general Victor Matemadanda.

Dube has previously taken the flake on behalf of the garrulous ex-combatants saying despite their sharp tongue, often directed at Mugabe and his family, his ministry still recognises them in line with a court ruling that validated the ZNLWVA’s legitimacy over a rival grouping led by Mandiitawepi Chimene and George Mlala.

Chimene is the Provincial Affairs minister for Manicaland, while Mlala deputises her in the rebel faction of the former liberation war fighters.

Known for speaking his mind, Dube set tongues wagging in June after he broke ranks with the tradition in Zanu PF by supporting the war veterans in their call for Mugabe to anoint his successor.

His closeness to Mutsvangwa’s leadership has, however, been rattling feathers in Zanu PF, which dismissed the ZNLWVA chairperson in July 2016, before wielding the axe on his top four Matemadanda; Douglas Mahiya (spokesperson); Francis Nhando (national political commissar) and Headman Moyo (deputy chair).

A few days ago, Dube was publicly admonished by Vice President Phelekezela Mphoko who warned that the former Zimbabwe Defence Industries boss could find himself at loggerheads with the authorities if he continued siding with renegades like Mutsvangwa.

“Tshinga, you are a senior person, I wonder why you hobnob with the likes of Matemadanda. Those boys are nothing. You are more senior than those boys. It’s embarrassing,” said Mphoko.

Mutsvangwa, who is linked to the Team Lacoste faction in Zanu PF that is campaigning for Vice President Emmerson Mnangagwa to succeed Mugabe, warned the incumbent on Wednesday that he was not a super human and were ready to work against his re-election bid ahead of the 2018 polls.

He said the liberation war fighters would be going around their structures informing their membership not to vote for the rival Generation 40 (G40) associates, who include Mugabe’s wife Grace.

“There is nothing magical about becoming president of Zimbabwe. It all comes from the people. He has no magical wand to pass on to his wife to protect herself when Jonathan Moyo and Saviour Kasukuwere go for her.

“Only the institution will protect her but they are trying to destroy the institutions. That’s why we stand by the army, the CIO (Central Intelligence Organisation) and the security establishment. The president is not a super human being. We are going to make sure that the election is going to be held free and fair whether G40 wants it or not. Mphoko don’t touch our Dumiso (Dabengwa) be a proper vice president I have never seen an empty head like that one’’.

Mutsvangwa’s statement came after First Lady Grace Mugabe threw the cat among the pigeons by challenging her nonagenarian husband to anoint a successor.

Grace took the unprecedented step of nudging her reluctant husband to name his heir-apparent when she addressed members of the Zanu PF women’s league national assembly at the party’s headquarters in Harare last month.

She reasoned that it was the trend in other countries for their leaders to handpick their successors, saying that act alone could also enable Zanu PF’s warring supporters to close ranks.

Her sentiments have, however, fuelled the infighting in Zanu PF, with the two factions in Mugabe’s party — Team Lacoste and G40 — latching onto her calls to advance their agendas.

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Fresh bid to impeach Mugabe

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HARARE - Morgan Tsvangirai’s MDC party has revived its bid to impeach President Robert Mugabe, this time with the full support of the Zimbabwe National Liberation War Veterans Association (ZNLWVA), which has since fallen out with the Zanu PF leader, the Daily News can report.

Mid this week, the former liberation war fighters who are loyal to Vice President Emmerson Mnangagwa, said they were willing to support the country’s largest opposition party in its bid to impeach Mugabe, who has been in power since independence from the British in 1980.

The MDC has seized on the offer, and has started engaging ZNLWVA to agree on the strategic and tactical issues involved. More importantly, Tsvangirai’s party wants to assess if ZNLWVA commands the numbers they claim to have in the National Assembly to enable the impeachment motion to gain traction.

Impeachment refers to an act of calling into question the integrity or validity of a holder of public office.

Zimbabwe has 210 Members of Parliament in the National Assembly and 93 senators, with the MDC having only 70 legislators in the lower house and 20 in the upper house. This means that Zanu PF has an overwhelming majority.

For any impeachment motion to go through, it needs the support of two-thirds majority.

ZNLWVA chairperson Chris Mutsvangwa told a press conference in Harare on Wednesday that they were willing to work with the opposition to get rid of Mugabe, accused by critics of presiding over the country’s economic meltdown and social decay.

“When executive authority is being abused, as is happening, a constitutional Republic like Zimbabwe can use impeachment, elections, or even votes of no-confidence against the monarchists and oligarchists in the G40, who are pushing for a dynasty. We will campaign and support such moves, if this mischief continues. The Constitution has a gamut of provisions to address all types of executive abuse of office including dereliction of duty,” said Mutsvangwa.

MDC spokesperson Obert Gutu yesterday said they were keen on working with Mutsvangwa and his executive, insisting whatever ZNLWVA was offering to do should be within the confines of the law.

“Definitely we are ready to work with them, especially if the things they want to do are legal and constitutional, as long as they want to do it using constitutional means we agree with them because we are fed up with the Mafia regime led by Mugabe,” said Gutu.

In 2014, the MDC tried to impeach Mugabe on account of “unconstitutionally” giving his then deputy, Joice Mujuru, her marching orders from government, but their bid fell through.

They revived the manoeuvres last year, citing concerns over Mugabe’s health and the swift deterioration in the country’s economy, but without any success.

While their grounds for reviving their impeachment drive were still not clear at the time of going to print, on its own, ZNLWVA does not seem to command much influence in the august House because if they had such influence Mutsvangwa would not have been easily ejected from Parliament following his dismissal from Zanu PF in 2015.

Mutsvangwa’s recall triggered a by-election in his former Norton constituency, won by Temba Mliswa.

ZNLWVA can, however, still claim to have some leverage on a number of MPs through its loose alliance to a faction backing Mnangagwa’s elevation to the top office, known as Team Lacoste.

Team Lacoste enjoys a huge following in Masvingo and Midlands provinces, where MPs from the rival Generation 40 (G40) faction are clearly outnumbered.

In Masvingo, 10 legislators have links to Mnangagwa’s bid, while the Justice minister has the support of more than 20 MPs out of the 28 constituencies.

In the remaining eight provinces, G40 seem to have the numerical advantage.

Team Lacoste’s functionaries also occupy strategic positions in the Justice ministry, Zanu PF’s legal department and in the National Assembly.

In spite of these advantages, there has not been any precedent where those who have dared Mugabe in his party have escaped the backlash.

Those who have tried it, including Mutsvangwa himself, have been consigned into the dustbin of political history with some of them rejoining Zanu PF on Mugabe’s terms.

Also, Zanu PF has been effective in using the whipping system to bludgeon its Members of Parliament into rallying behind its agendas and forestalling motions that work against its interests.

Only last month, Zanu PF MPs were whipped into line to pass the controversial Constitutional Amendment Bill (Number One) that had clearly split the ruling party along factional lines when it went through public consultations.

The Bill, once assented into law, will allow Mugabe to handpick the leadership for the Supreme Court and the High Court, unlike before when the selection process was spearheaded by the Judicial Services Commission.

Section 97 of the Constitution states that a president can be removed from office due to physical or mental incapacitation or serious dereliction of duty.

It stipulates that “the Senate and the National Assembly, by a joint resolution passed by at least one-half of their total membership, may resolve that the question whether or not the president or a vice president should be removed from office for serious misconduct; failure to obey, uphold or defend this Constitution; wilful violation of this Constitution or inability to perform the functions of the office because of physical or mental incapacity.”

The Constitution states that upon the passing of a resolution in terms of Subsection (1) of Section 97, the Committee on Standing Rules and Orders must appoint a joint committee of the Senate and the National Assembly consisting of nine members reflecting the political composition of Parliament to investigate the removal from office of the president or vice president as the case may be.

“If the joint committee appointed in terms of Subsection (2) recommends the removal from office of the president or vice-president; and the Senate and the National Assembly, by a joint resolution passed by at least two-thirds of their total membership, resolve that the president or vice president, as the case may be, should be removed from office; the president or vice president thereupon ceases to hold office.”

Gutu told the Daily News that in the past they have tried to convince their Zanu PF counterparts to pass a vote of no confidence against Mugabe with little success, principally because of Zanu PF was using the whipping system to crush dissent.

“Mugabe is overdue for impeachment by Parliament. His errors of both commission and omission are well documented. The man has, on several occasions, trashed the country’s Constitution by making illegal decisions and appointments. He has even refused to give rise to devolution by proceeding to appoint provincial ministers and governors instead of simply following what the Constitution says about devolution,” said Gutu.

“Of course, it’s a public secret that Zanu PF is incorrigibly divided and factionalised. The main legal hurdle is weather we will get sufficient numbers in Parliament to successfully impeach Mugabe. We are not too sure whether Zanu PF Members of Parliament will be bold enough to vote with opposition MPs. Zanu PF has perfected the art of patronage and most of their MPs will be dead scared to vote in favour of impeachment. The Zanu PF whipping system is commandist and ruthless. However, we would gladly welcome any Zanu PF MPs who have the guts to vote with us on an impeachment motion,” said Gutu.

Those behind the impeachment bid seem to be getting their encouragement from their South African counterparts who launched their eighth attempt this week to depose President Jacob Zuma from office.

Zuma, however, survived the impeachment vote championed by opposition parties, mainly the Economic Freedom Fighters and the Democratic Alliance, after that country’s Constitutional Court ruled that he ignored an order to repay State funds spent on his private home.

Two hundred and thirty-three lawmakers voted against the impeachment motion, while 143 voted in favour, including 29 from the ruling African National Congress.

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Zanu PF presidential hopefuls must open up

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HARARE - Vice President Emmerson Mnangagwa, Defence minister Sydney Sekeramayi and First Lady Grace Mugabe must all start talking straight and openly declare their ambitions to take over from President Robert Mugabe.

The crusade for the presidency has started slowly, with contenders playing their cards close to their chest, obviously because they all have to adhere to Zanu PF’s prescription that campaigning may only begin when the party says so at congress.

All the contenders have tried to circumvent this by dropping hints that they were ready to take over.

The first lady, Grace, is clearly now a potential successor to Mugabe after openly challenging her husband at a women’s league national assembly meeting to name his preferred heir.

She repeated the call at a youth interface rally in Chinhoyi.

It is clear she has ambitions for the highest office, which seems to be tacitly supported by Mugabe himself.

Grace may be angling to be the power broker, engineering a Mugabe successor behind the scenes. And that candidate is Sekeramayi. The Swedish-trained medical doctor has been named by G40 kingpin, Higher and Tertiary Education minister Jonathan Moyo, as a deserving successor to Mugabe, not Mnangagwa.

For now, it seems Grace is hell-bent on occupying the powerful vice president position together with another trusted ally.

Just like all the contenders, Sekeramayi has refused to openly lay a stake on the presidency, and just like others, just dropped hints. He has made thinly-veiled attacks against the rival Team Lacoste.

“President, Gushungo havanzi mdara achauya, mdara aripo (There isn’t going to be a new leader, Mugabe is already there), and he is going to lead us, he is still there. We endorsed him as the Zanu PF candidate and he will represent us in the elections,” Sekeramayi told Zanu PF supporters in Mbare two weeks ago.

Then there is the sly and cunning Mnangagwa. Speaking at a ground-breaking ceremony of agro-residential stands in Kadoma three weeks ago, Mnangagwa compared himself to the biblical Joseph — a very important figure in the book of Genesis, sold into slavery by his jealous brothers, but rose to become the Vizier, the most powerful man in Egypt next to Pharaoh.

“Tine ma (We have) clusters mana (four) under Zim-Asset. Ini ndiri (I am) vice president responsible for two clusters, food security and nutrition; nevalue addition and beneficiation. Ndiri we (I am for) command. Ndakaita saJosefa wemubhaibheri. (I am like the biblical Joseph) ”

With the country poised for a bumper harvest under the Command Agriculture scheme, it is easy to locate Mnangagwa’s cryptic message in the context of Joseph.

Joseph was enthroned Vizier or king after he successfully interpreted the dream of Pharaoh of seven years of abundance after a crippling famine.

This is almost what is happening in Zimbabwe, bumper harvest after drought.

Mnangagwa is subtly claiming credit for the success of Command Agriculture, which has lifted Zimbabwe’s 2017 growth outlook to 2,8 percent due mainly to a bumper maize harvest as the impoverished country recovers from severe drought.

And when he says “ndiri we (I am for) command”, does he mean Command Agriculture or, which command?

This is open to varied interpretation. Some people claim he means the military command.

All the candidates believe they have something to offer in terms of leadership.

The pool to choose from now is very limited.

The three candidates’ success will depend on how effectively they can rally the support of the people and the ranks of Zanu PF.

All candidates must be a bit more forthright. They are all subtly campaigning and making it clear they are an option for president. But it will take deals and forging alliances to make it happen. It is too early to say who stands with whom, but definitely those talks are beginning to shape up.

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Let's all ensure a crash-free holiday

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HARARE - Another popular travelling holiday — the Heroes and Defence Forces days — begins tomorrow with several people having already journeyed to different destinations across the country on Friday.

Most of Zimbabwe’s roads are in a bad state, leaving travellers at the mercy of drivers of both public and private vehicles.

In 2013, the same holiday recorded 43 deaths, 189 injuries in a total of 218 accidents across the country, while 40 people died and 139 were injured in 232 road mishaps in 2014.

The year 2015 recorded 13 deaths and 51 injuries in 123 accidents while 13 died and 67 were injured in 101 accidents during the same holiday last year.

The year 2017 started on a bad note and has already registered several bloody crashes.

In March, over a dozen members from the same family — on their way to Masvingo for a funeral — perished after a haulage truck jack-knifed and crashed into the kombi they were travelling on near the National University of Science and Technology in Bulawayo.

A South Africa-bound Proliner bus in April side-swiped with a haulage truck at Nyamatikiti River near Chaka Business Centre killing over 30 passengers — mostly cross-boarder traders — who were burnt beyond recognition.

In June, 43 people perished when a King Lion bus crashed near Nyamakate in Mashonaland West Province.

A kombi rammed into a stationary haulage truck in Dema, Mashonaland East Province in July, killing 10 passengers — six perishing on the spot while the other three died on their way to hospital with the tenth one succumbing to injuries two days later.

While the Traffic Safety Council of Zimbabwe has already warned against night travel ahead of the Heroes and Defence Forces holiday, it is high time the authorities explored ways of dealing with the carnage on Zimbabwe’s roads.

Most of these accidents result from human error, speeding, overtaking errors, misjudgment, inattention, reversing errors and unlicensed drivers.

The Zimbabwe Republic Police, whose presence on the country’s roads has been topical of late, must enforce traffic laws.

If the police are ever present on our highways, how come unroadworthy vehicles pass through their checkpoints?

Road users must make this holiday carnage-free by exercising extreme caution while authorities should ensure unroadworthy vehicles are found nowhere near the country’s roads.

Also, stringent speed control measures for instance transfixing speed limiters on public transport vehicles like kombis and buses at the point of manufacture may also help reduce the carnage.

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The military and Mugabe succession

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HARARE - President Robert Mugabe recently railed at top officials in the Zimbabwe Defence Forces (ZDF) for meddling in Zanu PF’s internal affairs, hinting he might retire the meddlesome security commanders.

He told multitudes of Zanu PF supporters in his home province of Mashonaland West in Chinhoyi two weeks ago that “politics led the gun”, some in the uniformed forces were positioning a candidate to succeed him.

“We give immense respect to our defence forces. Most of those in leadership are persons we were with outside the country and we continue to respect them as revolutionaries,” he said.

“Yes, they will retire and we must find room for them in government so they don’t languish, so they continue the struggle now, political struggle together with all of us in the leadership of the country and this is what we expect to happen.”

Mugabe, one of the last from a political generation that included the late South African president Nelson Mandela, was confirmed at the Zanu PF conference in Masvingo last year as the presidential candidate for the next presidential election in 2018, when he will be 94.

The next Zanu PF elective congress is in 2019, when a new leader will be chosen.

While the security establishment is deeply loyal to Mugabe, whom they see as a steadying hand amid intense jockeying over his succession in the State and the ruling party, top commanders are said to be backing Vice President Emmerson Mnangagwa to succeed him.

Political analysts this week said while Mugabe may not be happy with how his military chiefs have gotten entangled in Zanu PF’s politics that may not change the fact that the army has emerged as a major Zanu PF power broker in the governing power — rightly or wrongly.

Blessing Miles Tendi, an Oxford scholar, asserts that Mugabe has maintained civilian control over the military through shared ideology, patronage, and the formal and informal power he gets from his position as commander-in-chief and being the most senior remaining figure from Zimbabwe’s nationalist liberation struggle.

As a reward for their loyalty, Mugabe has given security sector officials high-level positions throughout the State and party and also granted the military and other security sector officials choice farms.

When it suits him, Mugabe has even allowed the military to issue statements, lampooning his political rivals, especially Morgan Tsvangirai’s MDC.

In the bloody 2008 elections, Zanu PF’s rivals were bitter that the military had become partisan — fighting in the ruling party’s corner.

More and more, top military chiefs have been pushing the boundaries to the point of taking sides in the on-going debate on Mugabe’s succession.

Piers Pigou, senior consultant at the International Crisis Group, said it would not be unusual for military chiefs to be retired, adding that most of the security force chiefs have been retained on rolling annual contracts for some years now.

“As such, Mugabe has retained the option of retiring senior security figures for some time now. His direct reference to retiring these commanders is sufficiently opaque to keep his options open on the timing; it could be interpreted as a threat to remind, as his reference to accommodating them in government could be interpreted as an olive branch. Once again, we see Mugabe keeping his options open, although he had never been so publicly explicit about these retirements,” said Pigou.

United Kingdom-based politics expert, Stephen Chan, said Mugabe “has to do this very, very carefully because those generals provide a very great deal of political strength.”

“Having said that it’s normal in militaries around the world for generals to be retired at a certain age. This is so that there be can a constant dynamic renewal in the military,” he said.

“The first role of the military is to defend the country. And you have to have leaders that are absolutely up to date with modern ways of conducting the defence of the country.

“Even in Great Britain, the most senior generals get one term at the top and they are replaced in what they call the chairman of the defence staff and then they have to go. So this would not be abnormal. However, here it’s a dangerous political game.”

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With Mugabe’s wife Grace emerging as a potential successor to the veteran president after openly challenging her husband at a women’s league national assembly meeting in Harare two weeks ago to name his preferred heir, experts are warning that if the incumbent passes the reins to a successor that is not acceptable to the military it may backfire.

This comes as brawling over the leadership of a post-Mugabe Zanu PF has sharply escalated, with two bitterly opposed camps going hammer and tongs against each other, with one rooting for Mnangagwa, 74, and the other backing Grace, 52, who has become a potent political force.

Defence minister Sydney Sekeramayi is also being tipped as a deserving successor to Mugabe.

Alexander Noyes, a senior associate at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies, said if Mugabe dies in office or passes the reins to a successor, the chances of some form of backlash could increase significantly, especially if the winning candidate does not enjoy support from the military.

“In this scenario, with Mugabe no longer on the scene, . . . (Constantino) Chiwenga or others may choose to step in and install Mnangagwa, a fellow liberation war veteran, or another leader who will secure their interests,” said Noyes.

In his address in Chinhoyi, an exasperated Mugabe suggested he would never back any leader who jockeys for his post while he was still there.

This comes as the women’s league has stepped up pressure demanding the reinstatement of a constitutional clause scrapped at the 2014 congress prescribing the installation of a female vice president, amid claims this was part of well-choreographed move to replace Mnangagwa with Grace.

With the fluid politics in Zanu PF, analysts said Mugabe is under immense pressure to dethrone Mnangagwa and his allies in the top echelons of the security establishment and replace them with “acceptable” individuals within the army, and further install Sekeramayi as successor, with Grace as one of the vice presidents.

This comes as Sekeramayi’s political stock is rising amid indications that neutrals in the do-or-die Zanu PF war to succeed Mugabe are pushing for his elevation to occupy the top office in the event that the incumbent retires or gets incapacitated.

Pigou said: “There is some speculation that Sekeremayi’s elevation is part of a longer term plan to facilitate Grace Mugabe’s political ambition. This seems an unlikely scenario.

“Indeed her leverage will diminish considerably once her husband has left the political scene. It is difficult to see how any political force within Zanu PF will see her as a significant asset once Mugabe is gone.

“Much depends on whether the political forces around her feel that a leadership role for the first lady will translate into a strengthened position for themselves or whether they would see her as a liability. The question must be asked, what does she bring to the table?”

Given Mugabe’s apparent advanced age and increasing frailty, analysts warned this raises the spectre of the president’s natural wastage while in office and the attendant risk of backward slippage towards political disorder and economic collapse.

Mugabe told the Chinhoyi rally he was OK health-wise.

Pigou said it was highly unusual for someone to retain this high office at such an advanced age.

“It is clear Mugabe no longer has the strength to provide the kind of leadership required given Zimbabwe’s acute challenges; his frequent dozing off at public events, his struggling gait, slow and mumbling delivery are all signs that do not inspire confidence and strongly suggest his stubborn retention of office reflects an inability to face reality and let go,” told the Daily News on Sunday.

Were Mugabe to be incapacitated, resign, removed from office or die, the new Constitution states that until 2023, the vice president who last acted as president assumes office as president for the next 90 days until the party nominates a replacement for consideration by Parliament.

Pigou said it remains unclear exactly how Zanu PF will make its selection as the modalities of the special congress that is tasked with making this decision are not explicitly set out in the party’s constitution.

Amid fears this may see someone from outside the party presidium leapfrogging into State House, Pigou said: “A selection outside of the presidium is a possibility but will be contingent on dynamics both within and outside the party’s structure. It remains to be seen whether Zanu PF will be able to demonstrate a credible internal democratic process.”

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MDC property goes under the hammer

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HARARE - The Morgan Tsvangirai-led MDC property recently attached over a $108 000 debt owed to the party’s former employee — Sally Dura — is set to be auctioned on Friday.

Dura, along with 15 other ex-MDC staffers, won an arbitration award for $600 000 for unfair dismissal.

Following the award, the MDC is said to have appealed at the Labour Court, but lost.

The applicants then applied for the quantification of the award.

Dura is owed up to 27 months’ salary arrears, damages for 36 months, among other benefits.

MDC, under case# HC 2411/17, will lose several pieces of furniture, including a four-piece maroon lounge suite.

The labour-backed party has a series of disputes with its former employees.

Last month, the MDC headquarters was left empty after the Deputy Sheriff pounced on the opposition party’s offices.

They disrupted a meeting that was being presided over by Tsvangirai, who ordered his lieutenants to allow the surrogate to do his job, peacefully.

MDC supporters and officials heeded the long-time President Robert Mugabe rival’s directive hence the exercise was done without incident.

In 2015, the Deputy Sheriff raided Tsvangirai’s residence in Highlands and the party headquarters but failed to attach any property.

This was after the MDC reportedly terminated contracts of 13 security aides in August 2010, before the Labour Court reversed the decision and ordered the party to reinstate them with full benefits.

Judge Justice Priscilla Chigumba ordered the party to pay a five percent interest on the varying amounts awarded to the employees in addition to the legal costs.

The Deputy Sheriff left Tsvangirai’s house and the party headquarters empty-handed after the MDC produced a court order staying the execution.

Some MDC senior officials alleged that the development was the work of Zanu PF.

“They (Zanu PF) want to harass us ahead of the 2018 elections. We were having our meeting and they disrupted (it) . . . This is a small issue; they cannot stop us,” MDC Gweru urban Member of Parliament Sessel Zvidzai said during the attachment of the property.

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Seza hunts for CEO

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HARARE - The Special Economic Zones Authority (Seza) has begun hunting for a new chief executive officer who will spearhead the country’s quest for increased foreign direct investment through Special Economic Zones (SEZs).

SEZs allow investors to operate under special conditions that are different from the rest of the economy and give investors more privileges.

Seza chairperson Gideon Gono said the authority was inviting suitable candidates from across the world to apply “for this prestigious and inaugural position”.

“This chief executive role requires a highly-experienced entrepreneurial leader who will work with SEZs to create a highly sustainable and balanced growth-oriented special economic zones model in Zimbabwe,” he said.

The incumbent is expected to be responsible for all day-to-day operations of the authority and to ensure compliances with applicable laws and regulations as well as policies and regulations set forth by the board.

Gono, who was in June appointed to head the Seza board, said the chief executive will also be responsible for creating an environment that enables effective partnership with government agencies, private industry players, Diasporans and zone investors to create new businesses, products, services in  the specialised areas.

The chief executive will be mandated to build new financing strategies and help in implementation incentives policies to enable SEZs deliver on foreign currency earnings, world-class infrastructure building, employment creation and balanced national growth.

“The chief executive is required to have a strong comprehension of the interconnected influences that, labour, environment, science, politics, economics, industry, media and social change dynamics play in SEZs issues which are all collectively needed to gain a highly developed political and business strategic awareness,” he added.

Market experts said the incoming chief executive already has his job cut out for him and should come with strategies to attract new foreign capital and compete with neighbouring countries such as Mozambique and South Africa that are in the process of setting up SEZs and have over the years beaten Zimbabwe in attracting foreign direct investment.

Zimbabwe’s foreign direct investment has been steadily declining from an all-time high of $545 million in 2014 to $319 million last year, according to the World Investment Report.

Gono said with the SEZ Authority setting up the development zones from scratch across the country either as privately-owned, private-public partnership or government-owned, it was imperative the successful candidate has extensive experience doing this previously.

“The learning curve must be as short as possible,” he said.

Among other qualifications, the new chief executive should have at least 10 years industry experience within special economic zones and preferably with experience within South East Asia or Africa.

The idea of SEZs was mooted in 1959 in Ireland with the intention to promote investment in deprived areas with incentives that might be unaffordable, unpopular or unnecessary if applied nationally.

With over 4 300 SEZs globally, China has successfully perfected the concept as the Asian giant’s incredible economic growth is attributed to special economic zones which were introduced in the early 1980s when the country opened itself to the rest of the world and cemented its place on the global stage as a major economic player.

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Anti-Mugabe cleric evicted from one-room lodging

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HARARE - Woes continue to mount for activist cleric Phillip Mugadza — who prophesied that President Robert Mugabe would die on October 17 this year — as he has been evicted from his one-room lodgings in the high density suburb of Glen View.

Following his controversial prophecy and consequent incarceration, the anti-Mugabe pastor has lurched from challenge to challenge, with his Kariba-based Remnant Church collapsing and marital problems escalating.

The defiant Mugadza, who has staged one-man anti-government protests in the Harare CBD, accuses his landlady of being influenced by Zanu PF elements to illegally evict him.

Last week, he told the Daily News on Sunday that he was stranded following a seven-day notice from his landlady requesting him to vacate a room he was renting together with his wife and two-year-old son, early this month.

“I was evicted. She said her daughter was coming to use the room. We only realised that she never meant to have her daughter in the room and interestingly, a lady from the president’s office who lived next door laughed when she saw us packing,” Mugadza said.

“This is what I have been saying, that the regime really has a hand in my family’s life, that they infiltrated my wife when they locked me away in remand prison that other time. I hope people will begin to notice what the regime is doing,” he said.

Mugadza, who had been occupying the Africa Unity Square park in the Harare CBD in protest, together with other activists between last Monday and Wednesday, had to prematurely abort the demonstration because he no longer had transport fares to continue getting into town.

The controversial cleric, however, vowed to resume the demonstrations this week in the park, adjacent Parliament Building.

He claimed that in one of his latest visions, 93-year-old Mugabe had died and resurrected twice.

“I have been in prayer and had some dreams of the president having died on two occasions but he woke up and came back to life.

“What I then remembered was that when the president is rumoured dead, he always says that he is more than Jesus Christ because he has died more than once and rose several times,” Mugadza said.

Meanwhile, Mugadza is answering to criminal charges case after he was arrested following a demonstration at Africa Unity Square.

The criminal nuisance charges emanate from a November 22, 2016 incident when the clergyman padlocked himself to iron rails while protesting against long-ruling Mugabe’s administration.

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Still in the game...but left out

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HARARE - Elderly people — aged 50 years and above — have for long been regarded as disinterested and lacking desire for sex.

The notion has particularly been associated with women.

But contrary to the belief, the age group is very much still in the game and feels left out and discriminated from the fight against HIV and Aids programmes due to misconceptions around their sex lives.

In many of the programmes, they have only been regarded as caregivers of HIV and Aids victims’ orphans or of people living with the condition.

They have, however, revealed that they are still sexually active and must be included in prevention and treatment programmes.

This comes as there have been many programmes targeting adolescents, based on the thinking that the young are key in controlling the spread and new HIV infections.

According to the Centre of Community Development Solutions (CCDS), the elderly’s involvement in HIV programmes is crucial because they are sexually active and also engage in the activity with those younger than them.

According to a presentation by CCDS at a National Aids Council workshop in Kadoma recently, there have been several misconceptions about people aged 50 and above, mainly that they no longer have a sex drive.

“ . . . misconceptions are that they (the elderly) know what needs to be known about sex and sexually transmitted diseases, that they are no longer in danger of infection, that older people especially women are no longer sexually attractive and are not sexually attracted,”  CCDS said.

CCDS said those aged 50 and above constitute 11 percent of the population, with projections that they will grow to 21 percent by 2030.

In addition, CCDS said indications are that a majority of those currently living with HIV between the ages of 24 and 44 will be in that elderly group, hence the need to craft policies and programmes targeted at the 50-plus age group.

Among the concerns raised about the inclusion of the elderly in HIV and Aids programmes is that they are being stigmatised because of their age.

“The elderly are comfortable to buy condoms because society raises eyebrows due to their age,” CCDS said.

“There is lack of targeted communication and information. Older people are more likely to be diagnosed of HIV later in the infection and they are more likely to mistake HIV symptoms as part of ageing complications,” it added.

“Older people with HIV infection are more likely to suffer secondary infections such as bone thinning, cancers and others while older women, because of the diminished chances of getting pregnant, are more likely not to use protection.

“At the same time health care providers are less likely to discuss sexual health with older patients thus missing out on important indicators.

“Studies show that over 50 percent of adults aged 50 years and above who conceived did so after their 50th birthday. Because of the cautions that are required of taking care of people lining with HIV, the elderly need more information regarding protecting themselves from getting infected, according to the presentation.

“Older people are left with the burden of care for both their adult sick children as well as their orphaned grandchildren. This is often not reported neither is it recognised.

“Older people have limited income streams making it difficult to manage the disease in the event of infection or when they are affected.”

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Trump a 'good fool': Mugabe

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HARARE - Donald Trump is a ‘good fool’ who stopped Hillary Clinton from becoming the United States president, President Robert Mugabe said.

Mugabe said Clinton would have added more sanctions to Zimbabwe, which is already reeling under restrictions imposed some 17 years ago following the controversial land reform exercise.

The nonagenarian leader believes the former US First Lady and presidential aspirant hates Zimbabwe.

“We do not know about Trump. Some claim he is mentally-challenged while others profess that he is indeed a mad man. I do not know about that, but if he is a madman, who was able to remove that woman who wanted to come after Obama, we would say he is a good fool, because she was going to bring more sanctions, so we say well, we also are children of God, and our prayers are heard, we are good neighbours and the Lord Almighty will just judge and assist us in our endeavours,” he said.

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Grace Mugabe seeks medical attention

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HARARE - First Lady Grace Mugabe has returned to seek medical attention in South Africa after injuries to her leg persisted, President Robert Mugabe said.

Speaking at a Gwanda youth rally yesterday, the 93-year-old leader said Grace had been complaining that the leg was painful. Grace was injured at the Harare International Airport recently, after Mugabe’s chauffeur set the car in motion before she was properly settled in.

“The first lady unfortunately could not be with us today here because she is in South Africa at the doctors. She was complaining that the leg she injured at the airport during the accident was giving her problems. It seems that the problem is taking time to heal, however, we are expecting her today if all goes well there,” he said.

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Mugabe tears into prophecy-crazed Zimbos

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HARARE - President Robert Mugabe has slammed Zimbabweans for trooping to Nigeria to seek prophecies.

During his address at a youth rally in Gwanda yesterday, Mugabe said people should desist from being duped by prophets.

His remarks come as scores of Zimbabweans, including senior government officials, have flocked to prominent prophets’ churches, seeking spiritual intervention.

“Beware of these prophets who also double as thieves. They will convince you with their very sweet-tongue. When you congregate at these big venues, be careful of what they really want. The end result is them siphoning your hard-earned money under guise of seeding. Do not fall victim to the talk of seeding your money so that it multiplies at church. It will be lost while you sleep.

“Instead, go to traditional churches like myself. The old churches that have built schools like Tegwane, Kutama and Waddilove. Do they not help? Some of you have cracked heels now because of going to Nigeria to seek divine assistance. Read and interpret the Bible yourself.

“It is even a pity that some of my ministers flock to these charismatic churches,” Mugabe said.

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Mnangagwa ally denied bail

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HARARE - Vice President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s ally, Energy Mutodi, will spend the Heroes and Defence Forces holidays in remand prison after a Harare provincial magistrate yesterday denied him bail.

Mutodi, who is facing charges of undermining the authority of the president and causing disaffection among members of the defence forces, was remanded in custody to August 25 and advised to apply for bail at the High Court.

In his ruling, Harare magistrate Elisha Singano, said while the law was clear that there must be compelling reasons for an accused to be denied bail, its provisions did not apply to Mutodi because he was inciting violence through his hate speech in his social media posts.

He said although the supreme law of the land provides for freedom of conscience, Mutodi’s activism must not incite violence and put the nation under security threat.

“The accused (Mutodi)’a posts were loaded with threats of causing instability in the country. Due to the severity of Mutodi’s charge, there is a strong likelihood of a stiff penalty and the accused fleeing the jurisdiction of the courts,” Singano said.

“Those who incite the public with hate speech are not good candidates for bail and, as such, the court concurs with the State that Mutodi should be denied bail,” he added.

Mutodi’s lawyer, Beatrice Mtetwa, had argued that there were similar cases where accused persons have been granted bail hence her client needed not to be an exception.

She said there was no justifiable reason why her client was being refused his freedom as the Constitution states that he is entitled to it.

“Section 50 (d) of the Constitution states that any person who is arrested must be released unconditionally or on reasonable conditions unless there are compelling reasons to justify their continued detention. His posts are justified as he is also a political commentator,” argued the human rights lawyer.

Mutodi was arrested after he wrote on his social networking wall, Facebook, that Zimbabwe risked a coup if the thorny succession issue was not resolved amicably, adding that President Robert Mugabe should consult the army to avert chaos.

“While a military takeover may be far-fetched in Zimbabwe, it is important for . . . Mugabe to be careful in naming his successor. Any suspicion of unfairness or discrimination on account of tribalism or factionalism may backfire,” he wrote.

“There are key stakeholders that need to be consulted, among them the military and the whole security establishment called the Joint Operations Command that is chaired by vice president Mnangagwa,” he went on.

On Friday, Mutodi’s investigating officer, Josphat Chitambira, said the Zanu PF member’s Facebook posts caused disaffection among defence forces as defined in Section 30 of the Criminal Law (Codification and Reform) Act chapter 9.23 and also “undermined the authority of or insulting the president as defined in section 33(2)(a)(i) of the same law.

“Investigations carried out so far have established that there is a concerted effort by an organised syndicate of high-powered people, working in cahoots with accused whom we are still working to establish.

“Police are still working with digital forensic analysts to recover additional material from accused’s Facebook account with a view of presenting additional charges,” said Chitambira.

Not happy with Chitambira’s submissions, Mtetwa had argued that the investigating officer should have compiled completed his probe before rushing to court to avoid violating her client’s rights.

“It’s politicking by the police. There is no legal basis for anything that you have said other than politics. Why are you making reference to high-powered people in your affidavit if you are not a politician? You are trying to rope in the court in your unlawful expedition in violation of the accused person’s rights,” argued Mtetwa.

“A reasonable, seasoned and professional investigating officer would have conducted investigations prior to coming to court. You do not even know the period from which you are seeking additional information. If the accused person opened his Facebook page in 2010 that would mean seven years of posts you have to sift through and if you failed to deal with one post in 24 hours what more seven years of posts,” the human rights lawyer, further argued.

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Mugabe mocks MDC alliance

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GWANDA - President Robert Mugabe poured scorn at attempts by opposition parties to form a grand coalition yesterday, saying their efforts will not move his ruling Zanu PF party, which has been in power for the past 37 years.

Addressing thousands of party supporters in the Matabeleland South provincial capital, Mugabe rallied Zanu PF supporters to pour out in their numbers come polling day to give the opposition a thorough hiding.

Mugabe has been addressing well-attended youth interface rallies countrywide as Zanu PF continues to demonstrate its mobilisation capacity.

The 93-year-old veteran of Zimbabwe’s liberation struggle, has so far covered six provinces, and is now left with only four — Harare, Mashonaland Central, Bulawayo and the Midlands.

The Matabeleland South rally came exactly a week after Mugabe’s bitter rival Morgan Tsvangirai of the MDC party had unveiled an alliance of seven opposition political parties to confront Mugabe and his ruling Zanu PF party at the next polls.

Mugabe thumped his nose at the coalition yesterday, saying Zanu PF was unfazed by it.

“We are going to elections, 2018; if you come out in these numbers (the) MDC will not get anything. You will sweep everything — let us sweep everything this time and then see where they will go,” he said.

“If they want to unite, there are putting patches, zvigamba hazviite VaTsvangirai (patches will not work out Tsvangirai). But we just laugh because we really need something to tickle us at times — let them try what they can do,” said Mugabe.

A fortnight ago, at the historic Zimbabwe Grounds, Tsvangirai sealed an electoral pact with seven political parties that include formations which sprung out of the MDC in 2005 and 2014, namely Welshman Ncube’s MDC and Tendai Biti’s People’s Democratic Party (PDP).

Before the ink had even dried on the pact document, there was trouble in the MDC Alliance with the PDP denying that they were now under Tsvangirai’s party.

Some of Tsvangirai’s senior officials, among them his deputy for over a decade, Thokozani Khupe, and national chairperson Lovemore Moyo, are also digging their heels in, saying they do not agree with the terms of the agreement signed on August 5.

Khupe and Moyo were conspicuous by their absence at the signing ceremony.

Mugabe has hardly missed the opportunity to poke fun at his rivals, especially Tsvangirai, who has been his fiercest rival ever since he burst onto the political scene in 1999 from the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions where he was secretary-general.

Only recently, he lampooned the alliance as a coalition of zeroes.

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Yesterday, Mugabe avoided touching on the emotive succession war in his Zanu PF party.

Instead, he spent the better part of his long and winding speech, dwelling on history.

He heaped praises on the late vice president Joshua Nkomo whom he described as a man who was committed to unity.

Mugabe then took a dig at Tsvangirai saying the MDC leader has always been opposed to the land reform programme, initiated by the war veterans in 2000.

“The leaders; some have 3 000 hectares or more when others have just 500 or less than that. That’s not fair — we all want the land. You heard people talking about (the) Command Agriculture system: We said to ourselves, after we had been given the idea by the First Lady (Grace Mugabe), after they had discussed with Vice President (Emmerson) Mnangagwa (that) we were now being mocked with people saying our (reforms had caused more harm than good), but now that breadbasket issue is over. I heard Tsvangirai saying you are taking white farms and you will suffer because of hunger, but we took the farms all the same because the farms were all ours — we fought, suffered and died for them, so we don’t expect a repeat of that again,” said Mugabe.

The increasingly frail Mugabe, who has been in power since the country attained its independence from the British in 1980, is currently struggling to keep his party united ahead of next year’s elections.

Despite the divisions in his party, which have manifested in the formation of two factions namely Team Lacoste and Generation 40, the Zanu PF leader believes his party will emerge victorious at the polls apparently buoyed by the huge turnout at the youth interface rallies.

He heaped praises on Zanu PF youth league leader Kudzanai Chipanga saying the youth interface rallies, which were a brainchild of the youth wing, had rejuvenated Zanu PF.

“Chipanga, you have demonstrated (what can be achieved) when your organisation is united — and thank God you have managed to unite the party. We thank you, you have done what the youth league was not able to do in the past,” said Mugabe.

“ . . . Youths must not give up, jobs will be there, don’t get tired of learning, we need you all the time, anaTsvangirai vakungodauka dauka (Tsvangirai and his team are always splitting),” he added.

Mugabe’s rivals have, however, pledged to put their differences aside in time for the elections in order to end Zanu PF’s rule.

Speaking at the National People’s Party (NPP)’s inaugural convention last week, Tsvangirai said there were really no differences among the country’s fragmented opposition parties in terms of their policies and thus uniting would be easy.

“I was listening to the proposals you make and I see that there is no conflict with our ideals and values so where is the problem? We can’t be divided on the basis of personalities,” Tsvangirai said to applause.

He added: “If we are agreed on the direction that we need to take, why don’t we put our differences aside and be united? We launched the MDC Alliance last week and we said we believe in the big tent and that 2018 is the only opportunity that we have as the opposition movement to defeat Mugabe . . . NPP is not our enemy and let me say atungamiri haatori nzira, (Being the first to take a certain route won’t block others from following the same path),” said Tsvangirai.

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'Bosso going through transformation'

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HARARE - The Daily News on Sunday recently caught up with new Highlanders chief executive officer Nhlanhla Bahlangene Dube to talk about some of the issues affecting the club. Find below excerpts from the interview.

Q: Tell us briefly about your life at Highlanders?

A: My association and relationship with Highlanders is as old as the story itself. I have been within and without Highlanders for a very long time. I was a club representative in a nonelected space in Harare. Gradually I became part of the functional aspect of the team. Way back in the early 90s just after university. Subsequently I was elected in to the Harare Supporter’s Association now called the Harare Chapter.

When the opportunity came I was nominated to be a committee member. I was based in Harare. I learnt quite a lot, worked with very sharp administrators. I suppose I got a grooming there. Later, I was elected club secretary.

Q: Why did you decide to come and be the CEO?

A: When the opportunity availed itself for me to come at Highlanders as the head of secretariat, I just thought it was an opportunity and challenge I couldn’t miss.

My belief is that we are at a time as a club where we are finally coming face to face with the need for us to be brave and cooperative ourselves.

Bearing in mind that Highlanders has been going through an evolution and transformation, though a lot of people might not know about it. There are a lot of transformational activities at Highlanders. I think it has readied the club for this stage that we are at.

I think there is a lot of concentration on the fact that the club owes, the club has an uncomfortable level of indebtedness. It is not understood that the changing in various dynamics which affect the football world as driven by different aspects of the economy will lead a club like ours which is member driven to the situation that it finds itself in.

I think Highlanders saw it coming a long while ago and there has been a lot of resolutions pertaining to how long we should have contracts with players and that we should consistently be producing and exporting players.

That the sale of players is a revenue stream on its own and various other things.

We should look at our sale of replicas and merchandise. We are probably a way ahead of a lot of our other compatriots.
We started this long back. In 2004, we were already designing and importing merchandise and replicas from China.

That has grown now to a level where we are discussing issues of technical partnering with branded kit manufacturers. Now we are able to state in numbers what we do in replicas and merchandise sales.

For me it is the time to broadcast, unleash and start to mechanise a vision that has been involving within the walls of the club and make it public and share it so that we have a broad-based energy so that we can plug into various other institutions corporate and social to leverage the brand. Focus is partnering with like-minded value systems. Institutions that share the same principles as we do

Developmentally we are focused on creating a sporting identity that continues to lead as an institution. Basically, I think to me the evolution has got into a time where it is starting to smell like a revolution.

It is because of that and such that I have availed myself.

Q: What was in your briefcase that you had to offer the Highlanders CEO?

A: My toolkit is a combination of corporate experience and football administration but the greatest asset in my toolkit was the ability in my view to drive myself towards seeing things from a different perspective than the obvious.

The ability to clearly define and communicate the club’s vision. The ability to network and knock on doors, share ideas and leverage on the ideas for the strength of the club. That, dressed by my optimism and shear passion are the greatest assets that I think I have.

The love for what I do; the never say die spirit, the continuous learning, that for me is what I offer. We want to be consistent when it comes to clarity.

The picture is big; the distractions are always there when the picture is big. We want to look at all problems as challenges. The problems for us are opportunities to find answers. If we find correct answers then we find solutions.

Basically my net being is a good feet for a challenging space such as leading the secretariat of a club the size of our own.

Q: How was the challenge like of taking over from seasoned veteran administrator Ndumiso Gumede?

A: It’s progression. You can never compare two individuals. Our skill sets as individuals are different. Even equipped with the same skill sets, our very characters and talent will make us different. We will try and achieve the same things differently. It is worth noting that my first certificate in administration was achieved before I was voted into any office. When I was in Harare I spent a lot of time with Gumede.

He encouraged me in fact to take up administration and be certificated. I learnt tonnes from him and gradually I am growing. I still speak to him a lot. It’s a continuous conversation that Gumede and I have.

It’s not a comparison, it’s a collective effort and we are very comfortable in our conversation him being the teacher and I being the student. I am glad to be having someone like that to consistently reflect ideas and issues. Of course new ideas come and there is a bigger community out there also from whom I enjoy to tap and learn every day.

I believe that a good leader is the one that learns every day.

Q: How has been the situation like after taking over?

A: The institution has grown, the systems have changed and new systems have developed. The guys that have been manning the institution in their different capacities have done a lot of good work.

They have moved the institution forward in a lot of ways.

And you need to come back and relearn; that is what I have been doing. When I came back I went straight to the deep end. It’s been straight out planning and action at the same time. It’s been exciting and time consuming. Such is the requirement for the office.

Q: What’s your five-year plan as Highlanders, what are the targets and goals that you have set for yourself and the club?

A: We have a plan, my office works as an implementing office. I could have a lot of ideas that I put together which we discuss as a body and the implementation then starts.

The vision that I cast when we started in my view after my mandate was given, is basically to speak to our brand image, our brand communication so that it is attractive to potential partners. So that we are seen in a way, our values and principles are appreciated.

We have to been seen as a credible viable partner by marketing entities and corporates who want a brand extension opportunity via our partnership.

Creating and solidifying revenue streams that are there. Our replica and paraphernalia side of things.

Our development policy for our youth. How our youth teams should develop from an entry level at a tender age until they get to the first team?
How do we market our players?

Development and sale of players is a commercial activity. It’s a huge revenue stream. How do we do that and what are our targets?

There are other ideas. How do we converse with our fans?

How do we understand them, how do we know them, how do we incorporate their interests? What do we communicate to them, when and how? All things are very important.

There is a lot of institutional thinking that we are doing, processing and documentation. We are also at the same time doing a lot of application.

Q: What are the major challenges at Highlanders?

A: Our biggest challenge that we have as an institution is finding resources quickly enough. To be able to do a lot of things that we need to do. To drive the greening process of our club house. Bringing our club house or our training facilities to the level that we want them to be so that we can be a sporting centre of note. It’s a landmark. When you talk of Highlanders everyone must know that it is a sporting centre.

It’s where everyone must want to go if they want to see the best practice for what grounds should be like.

Challenges are finding answers quickly on how to financially resource ourselves to achieve and overcome whatever we want to.

There is a lot of hard work going on, smart work. We have set some smart goals and we hope that come end of the year we are very positive that we will be getting partnerships and that will be driving a lot of our grand ideas.

The challenges at Highlanders are as grand as its plans.

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