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US warplanes kill dozens of civilians in Syria

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Bashar al-Assad

Bashar al-Assad

Patrick Martin
US  airstrikes in Syria killed dozens of civilians in a predominately Arab-populated village in the eastern part of Aleppo province on Friday. The death toll was still rising as more bodies were found and missing family members were accounted for.

Initial reports had put the number of deaths at 52, but at least one US media outlet, McClatchy News Service, said it had obtained a list of 64 dead from ten families. Whatever the final figure, it is the worst atrocity perpetrated by the US-led campaign of bombing supposedly directed at Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS).

According to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which has long supported the US-backed campaign to overthrow Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, at least nine children were among the victims of the US airstrike on the village of Bir Mahali.

It described them as victims of a “massacre committed by the US-led coalition under the pretext of targeting the Islamic State.”

The group had previously downplayed civilian casualties in Syria, claiming that only 60 civilians had died in the hundreds of airstrikes by warplanes of the United States, Saudi Arabia and the other Gulf sheikdoms participating in the war against ISIS.

The US Central Command, which regularly reports US airstrikes in Syria and Iraq without any detail on the death toll or the exact targets struck, said the May 1 attack was among nearly a dozen in “the area of” Kobani, the largely Kurdish-populated town on the Syrian border with Turkey that became the focal point for US airstrikes last fall. Bir Mahali is 33 miles south of Kobani.

McClatchy said that US warplanes had become involved in long-standing ethnic conflicts between Arabs and Kurds in the Euphrates River valley, an area with a mixed population that also includes Assyrians and other Christians. It cited reports from “activists pointing out that the fishing and farming village of about 4,000 Arabs has had tense relations with Kurds living nearby — especially with the Kurdish ‘People’s Protection Units’ or YPG.”

The implication was that Bir Mahali was targeted, not because of the presence of Islamic State forces — it is not clear whether there were any in the village — but because the Kurdish militia wanted to wreak havoc on an Arab-populated town.

The US military worked with the YPG in the months-long siege of Kobani. The YPG has political ties to the PKK, the Kurdish nationalist guerrilla force that has fought inside Turkey for decades, and is on the US State Department’s list of “terrorist” organisations.

The US-YPG connection demonstrates yet again that Washington uses the term “terrorist” in a completely cynical fashion, branding groups because they oppose US foreign policy, or fight US client states, not because of the methods they employ. When it comes to violence against civilians, as the atrocity in Bir Mahalli demonstrates, the US government is the world’s foremost practitioner of terrorism.

A statement from the Combined Joint Task Force, the official name for the US-led coalition bombing ISIS targets in both Iraq and Syria, said that there were 24 airstrikes carried out on May 1-2, of which 17 were in Syria, hitting Raqqa, the lone provincial capital under ISIS control, as well as targets near Kobani, Al Hasakah and Dair Az Zawr.

The seven airstrikes in Iraq were near Mosul, Tal Afar, Baiji, Ramadi and Fallujah, the five cities controlled by ISIS either wholly or in part.

The US military did not admit the killing of a large number of civilians in Bir Mahalli, but said it was investigating claims. Major Curtis Kellogg, a military spokesman, told the Associated Press; “We currently have no information to corroborate allegations that coalition airstrikes resulted in civilian casualties,” adding; “Regardless, we take all allegations seriously and will look into them further.”

The reported mass killing of civilians in Syria comes amid indications that key US client states in the region, including Saudi Arabia and Qatar, are stepping up their support for anti-government “rebels” fighting the Assad government.

The Washington Post reported April 30; “The delivery of additional weapons and financial aid from Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Qatar have facilitated recent advances against government forces in north-west Syria by the Army of Conquest, a newly formed umbrella of diverse rebel groups, including al-Qaeda’s affiliate and other Islamist groups, along with ‘moderate’ [i.e., pro-US] fighters.”

Last month these forces captured the north-western provincial capital Idlib, and then the city of Jisr al-Shughur, as well as numerous bases and outposts of the Syrian army, in an offensive that threatens to cut off the capital city, Damascus, from the Mediterranean coastal region that is Assad’s political stronghold. Jabhat al-Nusra, the al Qaeda affiliate in Syria, has played a major role in this military push.

The Post also reported that at a meeting of the anti-ISIS coalition in early April, hosted by Jordan, “administration officials were bombarded with questions about US leadership of the 60-nation group, and how it would address the global expansion of the Islamic State.”

The New York Times, reporting on the same meeting, said that members of the US-led coalition were pressing Washington “to agree to a broadening of the campaign to include terrorist groups that have declared themselves to be ‘provinces’ of the Islamic State.” —  wsws.


Dual citizenship: The people have spoken

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tobaiwaa-mudede

Registrar-General Tobaiwa Mudede has been dragged to court by Zimbabweans based abroad over dual citizenship

Nick Mangwana View From the Diaspora
This writer was under the impression that the dual citizenship debate was now water under the bridge. How could it not be? First there is Chapter 3 in our Constitution, then there are the two cases of Mutumwa Dziva Mawere v Registrar- General and three others. This was one of the first cases to be heard before the ConCourt since its inception under the new Constitution.

Then there was the case of Farai Daniel Madzimbamuto v Registrar-General and three others. But here is a challenge to every Zimbabwean out there, check your passport. Even if you collected it yesterday you will see, “A citizen of Zimbabwe who is 18 or above may not be a citizen of another country. A citizen of Zimbabwe who makes use of the passport of another government commits an offence . . .”

The first thought was this was old stationery stock. But no, the new Constitution has been in effect for two solid years this May.

This issue cannot be hanging.

It is one of those constitutional issues that have already seen two challenges and yet appears to be still hanging.

There is an argument here that the legal issue has been settled by the highest court in the land which was constituted to safeguard and vindicate the citizens’ rights. Maybe it’s time to look at the moral argument of dual citizenship. Maybe here there is a case of a bureaucrat somewhere imposing their own personal sentiment and whim on a nation.

Dual nationality or dual citizenship used to be a contentious issue with most nations frowning upon it.

Imagine that in the 1930s when the League of Nations came into being it came up with a declaration that: “All persons are entitled to one nationality, but one nationality only.” This was the thinking 85 years ago. The world has moved on. In those days a woman who married a person from a different nationality was forced to abandon the nation of their birth and adopt that of their marriage. Maybe on divorcing reverse the process. How discriminatory was such a system?

But thankfully this type of archaic thinking has been banished to the dustbin of history by many progressive nations including our own.

There are some people that still harbour the discredited dinosaurian notion that dual citizenship is a catalyst for treason and other subversive crimes. Nothing can be further from the truth. It has already been proved that some of the most fiercely patriotic people in the world have dual nationality.

But still having said that one has to see things from the point of view of those that are opposed to this idea. Some argue that dual nationality is a subversion of democracy as some people vote in two polities and determine the fate of those two sovereigns.

It’s not very clear why this is a subversion of democracy but the issue of people determining the fate of a place they don’t live in might sound like a fair point.

And maybe add the fact that it might also be considered to undermine the principle of one person one vote.

Imagine the thousands of Zimbabweans participating in the UK General Election on May 7 helping to determine the direction of British politics.

Then come 2018 the same group help swing the vote in some direction by determining the course of Zimbabwean political outcomes. To those that oppose extra-territorial voting that seems quite unfair. What gives a person a right to vote in an election? It seems currently in Zimbabwe it’s some combination of citizenship, age and residence. Zimbabwe is one of the countries that have embraced modernity.

Despite the debate around Diaspora voting which still rages on, it has to be made clear that Zimbabwe does allow Diaspora voting.

The writer is a registered voter in Zimbabwe and always makes sure his registration is in order despite having lived outside the country for a bit of time now. Any other Zimbabwean has the same opportunity and entitlement to do so. What some Diasporian are asking for is the country to facilitate “extra-territorial voting”. That is a debate in which those that oppose it have always asked whether people who are not subject to most decisions a government makes have a right to choose such a government?

This subject has been tackled in this column in the past but will always be referred to as some Diasporians feel quite strongly about it.

Words such as enfranchising and disenfranchising will continue to be used until a proper position is arrived at.

At the moment the strategy seems to be just to ignore it and wish it all away. But it will probably help with the uptake of the Diaspora

Bond to the address this issue in the Diaspora policy in one way or the other.

All these policies have frankly very little to do with dual citizenship which is nothing but pragmatic tolerance.

And tying the issue to extra-territorial voting policies is just a red herring. One of the most sacrosanct principles of sovereignty at international law is the prerogative of a country to set its own immigration rules on who can and cannot be a citizen.

But when the Constitution got worded the way it was in Chapter 3 and the ConCourt interprets it the way it has in the two cases cited above, it leaves the arguments against dual citizenship weak and flimsy to a level they can actually be considered petty resentment.

Citizenship might come with loyalty but the writer is happy to bet his mortgage that if, for example, the US was to go to war with Zimbabwe, and those with dual nationalities were to go to war, they would certainly fight on the side of Zimbabwe. There should be no debate on where the loyalty of those in the Diaspora lies. It is with Zimbabwe.

Prohibiting dual citizenship was and is one of those issues that have always been very difficult to enforce anyway.

A lot would remember in 1992 when Bruce Grobbelaar publicly surrendered his British passport in a blitz of media frenzy only for him to retrieve it quietly soon after. In 1995 he then surrendered both passports as part of his bail condition in a legal bother he was going through. And there was Zimbabwe’s then Chief Immigration Officer Elasto Mugwadi saying that Bruce had not violated Zimbabwean immigration law because, even though he had retrieved and kept his British passport together with his Zimbabwean one, the fact that he had not used the British passport exonerated him from any accusations of violating Zimbabwean law. Does it sound ridiculous? Maybe it actually is. One can see that both at law and in reality, positions don’t come more ambiguous than that. The suggestion seems to be that it’s ok to have a foreign passport as long as you don’t use it. Close readings of the quoted passport condition above seems to support Mr Mugwadi’s then statement actually. If such a high-profile person could get away with it, how many good people out there would be turned into criminals by this out of touch condition?

Any vague and vexatious criminalisation of a whole Zimbabwean community is indicative of a practice that is not fit for purpose. Enough of this equivocation. Zimbabweans need a clear position on dual nationality. The law seemed clear enough but the practice remains confused or maybe it’s just confusing.

The idea of treating citizenship like a marriage where one is forced to abjure to forsake all others and any flirtations with others no matter how innocent is considered disloyal has passed its use by date. Citizenship is not a marriage where having another is synonymous to bigamy. Those who have chosen to take another passport have only done so for the mere purpose of immigration and travelling convenience.

They have just avoided xenophobic victimhood by shifting their status. This has also helped them with accessing employment and education but their emotional fidelity rests with Zimbabwe. How else would they remain so engaged with what happens in their motherland if they were emotionally disinvested?

This is not just some mundane transnational political pastime. It is because that passport is just what it is – a travel document. Everything about them is Zimbabwean. Of course, there are those that have said they would never get a passport of another country no matter what. This is a laudable principle but it does not make them any better patriots than those that did.

There are also a lot of Zimbabweans that took other citizenship through a process called naturalisation but have desisted from taking the passport of the other nation.

Now where do those stand? Because the passport of Zimbabwe is only saying that you shouldn’t have another passport and there is a snowball chance in hell of the Zimbabwe state ever finding that out anyway. Taking a second citizenship is pragmatism and not disloyalty to the motherland.

Dual nationality is an irreversible side-effect of globalisation. Any attempts to thwart it might just slightly delay it but it cannot be stopped. The people of Zimbabwe spoke in the referendum of March 16, 2013. The learned judges spoke and continue to speak loud and clearly. It is now down to the bureaucrats to accept this post-modern phenomenon. The Government of Zimbabwe is regularly accused policy inconsistency.

Rightly or wrongly, time can be spent hurling hypotheticals over this, but the Zimbabwean passport provides enough anecdotes for one to reach an anecdotal conclusion that the accused is found guilty of the charge in this case.

 

Culture and identity, a prince’s disgrace in another kingdom

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Today, Zimbabweans are scattered all over the world, learning new languages and new cultures and forgetting that home is where it all begins

Ignatius Mabasa Shelling Nuts
If  you were sold at a cultural auction, how much would you fetch based on your language and cultural knowledge? In a globalised village, besides your passport, what is it that makes you Zimbabwean? If you left home for a number of years, and you came back to find all Zimbabweans, even those at the back of beyond, speaking Mandarin and eating noodles with chopsticks, what would be your reaction?

Would you feel betrayed that those who were supposed to have preserved our languages and cultural heritage, let the country down by allowing the Chinese culture to take over?

What if those you will be blaming for the betrayal also accused you of having left the country when you could have helped to play a part in the preservation of our rich Zimbabwean cultural diversity?

Will it not be possible for us to still be identified as Zimbabweans that speak Mandarin and eat noodles with chopsticks?

Are there certain Zimbabweans that must particularly carry the burden of preserving and promoting our cultures and heritage more than others?

When one of my friends left Zimbabwe, his intention was to go to the USA, work for five years and come back home and build himself a beautiful house in Harare and enjoy life.

It is now 23 years since he has been stuck there and each year he tells the same story that; “Definitely this year I will be back home because I am sick and tired of this place.”

But what is it that makes home special and why do foreigners feel strange and lost?

Why do we long for “home” even when we are in our home country?

When Lovemore Majaivana sang that poignant words of his, “Umoya wami awusekho lapha”, he was not in the USA.

He was in Zimbabwe, yet he missed home. Like Lois Lowry, I feel sorry for anyone including my friend who is in a place where he feels strange and stupid. On the other hand, like Elizabeth Lowell, I understand that “Some of us aren’t meant to belong. Some of us have to turn the world upside down and shake the hell out of it until they make their own place in it.”

But, imagine if we all left Zimbabwe to go and learn, work or settle in some far away country.

After spending 20 or 30 years, we then all packed our bags again to trek back home.

What would we be coming back to? How much would we bring, not just in terms of gadgetry, but tastes, beliefs, values, philosophies and languages? What will we have invested in during those years? Will it enrich your compatriots? What will our children raised in those lands be in terms of their identity? What history will they be talking about? Will they feel proud if addressed by their totem? Would they appreciate the beauty of their totem praise poetry? Soko Mukanya, vana mupona nezvekuba, vana mushambanegore? Or Shava Mhofu yemukono, mvura yadzonga, vana Matangakunwa, vanonwa shure vanonwa mabvondwe! Or Humba Makombe, chirimanemuromo!
Who will interpret the dead and deadly silence of the granite stones at Great Zimbabwe?

Who will tell the story of the Great Zimbabwe bird, hungwe?

Who will tell the story of Nyatsimba Mutota, Changamire Dombo or even explain that Gutu is a name derived from the great hunter Mabwazhe Chinemukutu Mapfuranhunzi — the sharpshooter, the one who never missed the bull’s eye with his arrow?

If we all left our motherland so that we can return as tourists, wearing designer Ray Ban, Police and Dolce Garbana glasses and taking pictures of mountains that are hiding stories, the history and graves of chiefs.

Who will lead the way to go back to our monuments when the grass in the meandering paths is overgrown and there is no one to tell whether we are in the right direction or not?

When we all decide to leave, at what point will we stop and turn around to go back and claim our dark shadows that could not keep pace with our bodies? What do we expect to come back home and find when we have been gone for so long such that we no longer dream in our own mother languages?

What will we find home when those back home are trying their best to compete with their brothers and sisters in the Diaspora to speak English with an American accent, to raise up children like Westerners and to divorce like movie stars?

Language is what defines us, what gives us identity.

Language is our homeland, it is our rallying point and what helps us to genuinely express the deepest and most complicated feelings.
It is language that speaks and welcomes those in the Diaspora when they come back home to say you are indeed home MaDube, Chihera or Magumbo. Home may have its share of problems, but it is the only place where you can laugh like a brook without inviting strange looks.

Today Zimbabweans are scattered all over — even in some very inhospitable places close to the North Pole where the sun is shy and shines with a strange brilliance. Unfortunately, a king’s son loses his honour in another kingdom. When you are in a foreign land, your spirit dries up like a river in drought. One despondent reader in the Diaspora said; “We were counting on you guys back home to still keep our languages, culture and customs intact. We are trying to teach our children our values here, but it is not working because there is a clash of cultures.”

I have seen people who went away from home coming back and expecting to find the sugar still being kept in the same old cracked blue tin that it was kept in 20 years ago. But it is a fact that even though the finger may point anywhere it likes, it doesn’t have the power to make a road. For continuity, for the sake of heritage, promotion of customs and values — Zimbabweans need to realise that culture is all our business. No cow grazes for another cow that is relaxing in the shade. Also, you should not expect to get cow dung when you don’t have any cows in your kraal. While we need the English language to remain relevant in a global village, it is important to enter the global village with our culture and identity. The Japanese have done that well.

The fact that some of us are in foreign countries, but at the same time expect that those who are home should ensure that all that makes us a united people with an identity, vibrant and colourful culture that functions properly is being high-handed. It is people who drive culture, including those in the Diaspora. Culture needs each one of us to play a role, to contribute and make it work. If sekuru Tonde has decided to stay in Australia, the nephews who were supposed to drink culture from him will drink poison from friends and social media. If Baba vaChido left home when Chido was five to settle in Scotland, when Chido gets married and he emails a list of his lobola requirements, he would have denied Chido’s brothers learning how in-laws are received and how lobola negotiations happen. And baba vaChido’s being in Scotland and wanting lobola for Chido, but not coming back to see, support and encourage Chido since she was five is the greatest betrayal and abdication of cultural duty. There are events, ceremonies and rituals that are best seen, shared, experienced and lived for them to make sense.

There are certain things that need all of us to be involved. The kana maenda kuchechi munotinamatirawo mentality is unproductive and unprogressive. Let us join efforts by institutions like UNESCO and fight against prejudice and discrimination handed down from history that we are second class and our languages are inferior. We need to have better knowledge of the history of Africa, the slave trade, slavery and its consequences in modern societies and the contribution of Africans and the African Diaspora to human progress. And by the way, if you see baba vaChido in Edinburgh, tell him that his absence has gone through Chido “like thread through a needle, and everything she does is stitched with its colour.”

 

Apartheid alive and well in Australia

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John Pilger
AUSTRALIA has again declared war on its indigenous people, reminiscent of the brutality that brought universal condemnation on apartheid South Africa. Aboriginal people are to be driven from homelands where their communities have lived for thousands of years. In Western Australia, where mining companies make billion dollar profits exploiting Aboriginal land, the state government says it can no longer afford to “support” the homelands.

Vulnerable populations, already denied the basic services most Australians take for granted, are on notice of dispossession without consultation, and eviction at gunpoint. Yet again, Aboriginal leaders have warned of “a new generation of displaced people” and “cultural genocide”.

Genocide is a word Australians hate to hear. Genocide happens in other countries, not the “lucky” society that per capita is the second richest on earth. When “act of genocide” was used in the 1997 landmark report ‘Bringing Them Home’, which revealed that thousands of Indigenous children had been stolen from their communities by white institutions and systematically abused, a campaign of denial was launched by a far-right clique around the then prime minister John Howard. It included those who called themselves the Galatians Group, then Quadrant, then the Bennelong Society; the Murdoch press was their voice.

The Stolen Generation was exaggerated, they said, if it had happened at all. Colonial Australia was a benign place; there were no massacres. The First Australians were victims of their own cultural inferiority, or they were noble savages. Suitable euphemisms were deployed.

The government of the current prime minister, Tony Abbott, a conservative zealot, has revived this assault on a people who represent Australia’s singular uniqueness. Soon after coming to office, Abbott’s government cut $534 million in indigenous social programmes, including $160 million from the indigenous health budget and $13,4 million from indigenous legal aid.

In the 2014 report “Overcoming Indigenous Disadvantage Key Indicators”, the devastation is clear. The number of Aboriginal people hospitalised for self-harm has leapt, as have suicides among those as young as eleven. The indicators show a people impoverished, traumatised and abandoned. Read the classic expose of apartheid “South Africa, The Discarded People” by Cosmas Desmond, who told me he could write a similar account of Australia.

The current political attack was launched in the richest state, Western Australia. Last October, the state premier, Colin Barnett, announced that his government could not afford the $90 million budget for basic municipal services to 282 homelands: water, power, sanitation, schools, road maintenance, rubbish collection. It was the equivalent of informing the white suburbs of Perth that their lawn sprinklers would no longer sprinkle and their toilets no longer flush; and they had to move; and if they refused, the police would evict them.

Where would the dispossessed go? Where would they live? In six years, Barnett’s government has built few houses for indigenous people in remote areas. In the Kimberley region, indigenous homelessness – aside from natural disaster and civil strife – is one of the highest anywhere, in a state renowned for its conspicuous wealth, golf courses and prisons overflowing with impoverished black people. Western Australia jails Aboriginal males at more than eight times the rate of apartheid South Africa. It has one of the highest incarceration rates of juveniles in the world, almost all of them indigenous, including children kept in solitary confinement in adult prisons, with their mothers keeping vigil outside.

In 2013, the former prisons minister, Margaret Quirk, told me that the state was “racking and stacking” Aboriginal prisoners. When I asked what she meant, she said: “It’s warehousing.”

In March, Barnett changed his story. There was “emerging evidence”, he said, “of appalling mistreatment of little kids” in the homelands. What evidence? Barnett claimed that gonorrhoea had been found in children younger than 14, then conceded he did not know if these were in the homelands.

The Australian Institute of Health and Welfare, a federal agency, recently released a report on what it calls the “Fatal Burden” of Third World disease and trauma borne by indigenous people “resulting in almost 100 000 years of life lost due to premature death”. This “fatal burden” is the product of extreme poverty imposed in Western Australia, as in the rest of Australia, by the denial of human rights.

In Barnett’s vast rich Western Australia, barely a fraction of mining, oil and gas revenue has benefited communities for which his government has a duty of care. In the town of Roeburne, in the midst of the booming minerals-rich Pilbara, 80 percent of the indigenous children suffer from an ear infection called otitis media that causes deafness.

In bookshops, “Australian non-fiction” shelves are full of opportunistic tomes about wartime derring-do, heroes and jingoism. Suddenly, Aboriginal people who fought for the white man are fashionable, whereas those who fought against the white man in defence of their own country, Australia, are unfashionable. Indeed, they are officially non-people. The Australian War Memorial refuses to recognise their remarkable resistance to the British invasion. In a country littered with Anzac memorials, not one official memorial stands for the thousands of native Australians who fought and fell defending their homeland.

This is part of the “great Australian silence”, as W.E.H. Stanner in 1968 called his lecture in which he described a “cult of forgetfulness on a national scale”. He was referring to the Indigenous people. Today, the silence is ubiquitous. In Sydney, the Art Gallery of New South Wales currently has an exhibition, ‘The Photograph and Australia’, in which the timeline of this ancient country begins, incredibly, with Captain Cook.

The same silence covers another enduring, epic resistance. Extraordinary demonstrations of Indigenous women protesting the removal of their children and grandchildren by the state, some of them at gunpoint, are ignored by journalists and patronised by politicians. More Indigenous children are being wrenched from their homes and communities today than during the worst years of the Stolen Generation. A record 15 000 are presently detained “in care”; many are given to white families and will never return to their communities.

Last year, the West Australian Police Minister, Liza Harvey, attended a screening in Perth of my film, ‘Utopia’, which documented the racism and thuggery of police towards black Australians, and the multiple deaths of young Aboriginal men in custody. The minister cried.

On her watch, 50 City of Perth armed police raided an Indigenous homeless camp at Matagarup, and drove off mostly elderly women and young mothers with children. The people in the camp described themselves as “refugees . . . seeking safety in our own country”. They called for the help of the United Nations High Commissioner on Refugees.

Having insulted indigenous Australians by declaring (at a G20 breakfast for David Cameron) that there was “nothing but bush” before the white man, Abbott announced that his government would no longer honour the longstanding commitment to Aboriginal homelands. He sneered: “It’s not the job of the taxpayers to subsidise lifestyle choices.”

The weapon used by Abbott and his redneck state and territorial counterparts is dispossession by abuse and propaganda, coercion and blackmail, such as his demand for a 99-year leasehold of Indigenous land in the Northern Territory in return for basic services: a land grab in all but name. The Minister for Indigenous Affairs, Nigel Scullion, refutes this, claiming “this is about communities and what communities want”. In fact, there has been no real consultation, only the co-option of a few.

Both conservative and Labour governments have already withdrawn the national jobs programme, CDEP, from the homelands, ending opportunities for employment, and prohibited investment in infrastructure: housing, generators, sanitation. The saving is peanuts.

The reason is an extreme doctrine that evokes the punitive campaigns of the early 20th century “chief protector of Aborigines”, such as the fanatic A.O. Neville who decreed that the first Australians “assimilate” to extinction. Influenced by the same eugenics movement that inspired the Nazis, Queensland’s “protection acts” were a model for South African apartheid.

Today, the same dogma and racism are threaded through anthropology, politics, the bureaucracy and the media. “We are civilised, they are not,” wrote the acclaimed Australian historian Russel Ward two generations ago. The spirit is unchanged.

Having reported on Aboriginal communities since the 1960s, I have watched a seasonal routine whereby the Australian elite interrupts its “normal” mistreatment and neglect of the people of the First Nations, and attacks them outright. This happens when an election approaches, or a prime minister’s ratings are low. Kicking the blackfella is deemed popular, although grabbing minerals-rich land by stealth serves a more prosaic purpose. Driving people into the fringe slums of “economic hub towns” satisfies the social engineering urges of racists.

Australian politicians are nervous of the United Nations. Abbott’s response has been abuse. When Professor James Anaya, the UN Special Rapporteur on Indigenous People, described the racism of the “intervention”, Abbott told him to, “get a life” and “not listen to the old victim brigade”.

The planned closure of Indigenous homelands breaches Article 5 of the International Convention for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (ICERD) and the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People (UNDRIP). Australia is committed to “provide effective mechanisms for prevention of, and redress for… any action which has the aim of dispossessing [Indigenous people] of their lands, territories or resources”. The Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights is blunt. “Forced evictions” are against the law.

An international momentum is building. In 2013, Pope Francis urged the world to act against racism and on behalf of “indigenous people who are increasingly isolated and abandoned”. It was South Africa’s defiance of such a basic principle of human rights that ignited the international opprobrium and campaign that brought down apartheid. Australia beware.

The last frontal attack was in 2007 when Prime Minister Howard sent the army into Aboriginal communities in the Northern Territory to “rescue children” who, said his minister for Aboriginal Affairs, Mal Brough, were being abused by paedophile gangs in “unthinkable numbers”.

Known as “the intervention”, the media played a vital role. In 2006, the national TV current affairs programme, the ABC’s “Lateline”, broadcast a sensational interview with a man whose face was concealed. Described as a “youth worker” who had lived in the Aboriginal community of Mutitjulu, he made a series of lurid allegations. Subsequently exposed as a senior government official who reported directly to the minister, his claims were discredited by the Australian Crime Commission, the Northern Territory Police and a damning report by child medical specialists. The community received no apology.

The 2007 “intervention” allowed the federal government to destroy many of the vestiges of self-determination in the Northern Territory, the only part of Australia where Aboriginal people had won federally-legislated land rights. Here, they had administered their homelands in ways with the dignity of self-determination and connection to land and culture and, as Amnesty reported, a 40 per cent lower mortality rate.

It is this “traditional life” that is anathema to a parasitic white industry of civil servants, contractors, lawyers and consultants that controls and often profits from Aboriginal Australia, if indirectly through the corporate structures imposed on indigenous organisations. The homelands are seen as a threat, for they express a communalism at odds with the neo-conservatism that rules Australia. It is as if the enduring existence of a people who have survived and resisted more than two colonial centuries of massacre and theft remains a spectre on white Australia: a reminder of whose land this really is.

The current political attack was launched in the richest state, Western Australia. Last October, the state premier, Colin Barnett, announced that his government could not afford the $90 million budget for basic municipal services to 282 homelands: water, power, sanitation, schools, road maintenance, rubbish collection. It was the equivalent of informing the white suburbs of Perth that their lawn sprinklers would no longer sprinkle and their toilets no longer flush; and they had to move; and if they refused, the police would evict them.

Where would the dispossessed go? Where would they live? In six years, Barnett’s government has built few houses for Indigenous people in remote areas. In the Kimberley region, Indigenous homelessness – aside from natural disaster and civil strife – is one of the highest anywhere, in a state renowned for its conspicuous wealth, golf courses and prisons overflowing with impoverished black people. Western Australia jails Aboriginal males at more than eight times the rate of apartheid South Africa. It has one of the highest incarceration rates of juveniles in the world, almost all of them indigenous, including children kept in solitary confinement in adult prisons, with their mothers keeping vigil outside.

In 2013, the former prisons minister, Margaret Quirk, told me that the state was “racking and stacking” Aboriginal prisoners. When I asked what she meant, she said, “It’s warehousing.”

In March, Barnett changed his story. There was “emerging evidence”, he said, “of appalling mistreatment of little kids” in the homelands. What evidence? Barnett claimed that gonorrhoea had been found in children younger than 14, then conceded he did not know if these were in the homelands. His police commissioner, Karl O’Callaghan, chimed in that child sexual abuse was “rife”. He quoted a 15-year-old study by the Australian Institute of Family Studies. What he failed to say was that the report highlighted poverty as the overwhelming cause of “neglect” and that sexual abuse accounted for less than 10 per cent.

The Australian Institute of Health and Welfare, a federal agency, recently released a report on what it calls the “Fatal Burden” of Third World disease and trauma borne by Indigenous people “resulting in almost 100,000 years of life lost due to premature death”. This “fatal burden” is the product of extreme poverty imposed in Western Australia, as in the rest of Australia, by the denial of human rights.

In Barnett’s vast rich Western Australia, barely a fraction of mining, oil and gas revenue has benefited communities for which his government has a duty of care. In the town of Roeburne, in the midst of the booming minerals-rich Pilbara, 80 per cent of the indigenous children suffer from an ear infection called otitis media that causes deafness.

In 2011, the Barnett government displayed a brutality in the community of Oombulgurri the other homelands can expect. “First, the government closed the services,” wrote Tammy Solonec of Amnesty International, “It closed the shop, so people could not buy food and essentials. It closed the clinic, so the sick and the elderly had to move, and the school, so families with children had to leave, or face having their children taken away from them. The police station was the last service to close, then eventually the electricity and water were turned off. Finally, the 10 residents who resolutely stayed to the end were forcibly evicted [leaving behind] personal possessions. [Then] the bulldozers rolled into Oombulgurri. The WA government has literally dug a hole and in it buried the rubble of people’s homes and personal belongings.”

In South Australia, the state and federal governments launched a similar attack on the 60 remote Indigenous communities. South Australia has a long-established Aboriginal Lands Trust, so people were able to defend their rights – up to a point. On April 12, the federal government offered $15 million over five years. That such a miserly sum is considered enough to fund proper services in the great expanse of the state’s homelands is a measure of the value placed on Indigenous lives by white politicians who unhesitatingly spend $28 billion annually on armaments and the military. Haydn Bromley, chair of the Aboriginal Lands Trust told me, “The $15 million doesn’t include most of the homelands, and it will only cover bare essentials – power, water. Community development? Infrastructure? Forget it.”

The current distraction from these national dirty secrets is the approaching “celebrations” of the centenary of an Edwardian military disaster at Gallipoli in 1915 when 8 709 Australian and 2 779 New Zealand troops – the Anzacs – were sent to their death in a futile assault on a beach in Turkey. In recent years, governments in Canberra have promoted this imperial waste of life as an historical deity to mask the militarism that underpins Australia’s role as America’s “deputy sheriff” in the Pacific.

In bookshops, “Australian non-fiction” shelves are full of opportunistic tomes about wartime derring-do, heroes and jingoism. Suddenly, Aboriginal people who fought for the white man are fashionable, whereas those who fought against the white man in defence of their own country, Australia, are unfashionable. Indeed, they are officially non-people. The Australian War Memorial refuses to recognise their remarkable resistance to the British invasion. In a country littered with Anzac memorials, not one official memorial stands for the thousands of native Australians who fought and fell defending their homeland.

This is part of the “great Australian silence”, as W.E.H. Stanner in 1968 called his lecture in which he described a “cult of forgetfulness on a national scale”. He was referring to the Indigenous people. Today, the silence is ubiquitous. In Sydney, the Art Gallery of New South Wales currently has an exhibition, ‘The Photograph and Australia’, in which the timeline of this ancient country begins, incredibly, with Captain Cook.

The same silence covers another enduring, epic resistance. Extraordinary demonstrations of Indigenous women protesting the removal of their children and grandchildren by the state, some of them at gunpoint, are ignored by journalists and patronised by politicians. More Indigenous children are being wrenched from their homes and communities today than during the worst years of the Stolen Generation. A record 15 000 are presently detained “in care”; many are given to white families and will never return to their communities.

Last year, the West Australian Police Minister, Liza Harvey, attended a screening in Perth of my film, ‘Utopia’, which documented the racism and thuggery of police towards black Australians, and the multiple deaths of young Aboriginal men in custody. The minister cried.

On her watch, 50 City of Perth armed police raided an Indigenous homeless camp at Matagarup, and drove off mostly elderly women and young mothers with children. The people in the camp described themselves as “refugees… seeking safety in our own country”. They called for the help of the United Nations High Commissioner on Refugees.

Australian politicians are nervous of the United Nations. Abbott’s response has been abuse. When Professor James Anaya, the UN Special Rapporteur on Indigenous People, described the racism of the “intervention”, Abbott told him to, “get a life” and “not listen to the old victim brigade”.

The planned closure of Indigenous homelands breaches Article 5 of the International Convention for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (ICERD) and the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People (UNDRIP). Australia is committed to “provide effective mechanisms for prevention of, and redress for… any action which has the aim of dispossessing [Indigenous people] of their lands, territories or resources”. The Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights is blunt. “Forced evictions” are against the law.

An international momentum is building. In 2013, Pope Francis urged the world to act against racism and on behalf of “indigenous people who are increasingly isolated and abandoned”. It was South Africa’s defiance of such a basic principle of human rights that ignited the international opprobrium and campaign that brought down apartheid. Australia beware.

www. johnpilger.com

Cost of reduced budgetary support to health sector

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Benson Zwizwai Our Children, Our Future
Fiscal space refers to the financial resources that are available to government resulting from concrete policy actions for increasing resource mobilisation, and the reforms necessary to secure the enabling governance, institutional and economic environment for these policy actions to be effective, for a specified set of development objectives.

The future of the Zimbabwean economy, in particular the key social sectors is uncertain. The economic growth that the country has been experiencing since the adoption of the multi-currency system, which reached a peak of 11,9 percent in 2011, has been weakening.

Economic growth projections for 2015 are around 3,2 percent.

Related to the slow economic growth is the slow growth in domestic budget revenues. According to the ZIMRA Revenue Performance Report for the year ending December 2014, revenues were suppressed by liquidity challenges, company closures and scaling down of operations.

Net ZIMRA revenue collections for 2014 amounted to US$3,6 billion, 6 percent lower than the target of US$3,82 billion. The disparity between target and actual revenue collection was wider in the fourth quarter of the year. The revenue collection of US$996,94 during that quarter was 10 percent lower than the target of US$1,1 billion showing signs of a shrinking fiscal space.

These developments are occurring at a time when support from development partners under the Transition Funds for health, education and WASH, is coming to an end. These sectors have benefited from pooled funds under the UNICEF support, targeting non-wage expenditures such as procurement of drugs, maternal health, procurement of textbooks, cash transfers and drilling of boreholes.

With the imminent termination of these programmes, there is a real possibility that the country may witness a reversal in the achievements made in the health and education sectors – hence the need for innovative ways of maintaining support to these sectors and reducing dependency on donor funding.

Health is a human right enshrined in the UN’s Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the African Charter on Human and People’s Rights and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, among other things.

It is an important component of quality of life and every human being has the right to the highest attainable standard of physical and mental health, without discrimination. This includes access to adequate health care (curative, preventive rehabilitative or palliative), nutrition, sanitation, clean water and air, and occupational health.

The right to health is very important to a person’s life and well-being, and is necessary to enable them to enjoy other rights.

Universal health care tops the global health policy agenda and calls for health systems in which everyone has access to the services they need and universal financial protection from the costs of using those services.

Section 2 (29) of the new Constitution of Zimbabwe states that:

(1) The State must take all practical measures to ensure the provision of basic, accessible and adequate health services throughout Zimbabwe.

(2) The State must take appropriate, fair and reasonable measures to ensure that no person is refused emergency medical treatment at any health facility.

(3) The State must take all preventive measures, within the limits of the resources available to it, including education and public awareness programmes, against the spread of diseases.

From the above it is clear that the spirit of the Constitution of Zimbabwe is that the Government has the ultimate responsibility to ensure that all its citizens have access to adequate health services.

However, the situation alluded to earlier on, that is seeing the levelling off in the growth of Government revenues at a time that extra budgetary support from development partners is ending, brings serious challenges to the capacity of Government to meet its health obligations that are outlined in the Constitution.

The question that arises is what impact will reduced financial resource allocations to the health sector have on the health sector itself and on the economy at large?

Further, what innovative ways can be introduced to improve national health funding?

Investment in health affects economic growth and poverty reduction in a positive way, both directly and indirectly.

Healthy workers tend to be more productive over the course of longer lives. Improving maternal health is an investment that benefits not only the mother, but also the unborn child. According to the World Bank Growth Report of 2008, it has been established that when children are undernourished in the womb or in infancy, their cognitive development is retarded, and this can have permanent consequences, reducing their ability to benefit from education and reducing their productivity and hence negatively affecting long-term prospects of their countries. Under-investment in health will therefore have the effect of compromising long-term economic growth due to an eventually “lower quality” and less productive human resource base.

Further, the country will continue to exhibit, income inequalities with the poor segments of the population finding difficulties to break out of the poverty trap – opportunities which could be afforded by access to health and education.

Long-run economic growth is key in informing all types of economic policy choices, including budgetary allocations.

The UN System Task Team on the Post-2015 UN Development Agenda (2012) argued that ensuring people’s rights to health and education, is vital for inclusive social development and requires investment to “close the gaps in human capabilities that help perpetuate inequalities and poverty across generations”.

The UNDP 2013 Human Development Report also noted that inclusive economic development requires investment in people’s capabilities through public spending on social services, particularly health, education and nutrition.

Public spending on social services is a means of income redistribution and contributes to sustained inclusive economic development.

To see the effects of reducing budgetary support to health, on the health sector itself one needs only to rewind and review the situation that prevailed during the hyper-inflationary period that was concluded with the adoption of the multi-currency system in 2009. Of course the challenges rooted in that era were so deep that some of them continued and still manifest themselves to date.

The entire social service delivery system including the health sector was crippled. There was deterioration of health infrastructure and a widespread shortage of essential medical supplies such as drugs and consumables. Many Zimbabwean women were opting to give birth at home despite the obvious dangers. There was poor remuneration of health workers leading to emigration and the brain drain of qualified and experienced health personnel.

Child health status indicators such as infant and under five mortality rates deteriorated. There were disruptions even in transport and telecommunications, which compromised several programmes including patient transfers, malaria indoor residual spraying, drug distribution and supervision of districts and rural health centres. The country also experienced a number of outbreaks of diseases and of note is the cholera outbreak of 2008.

The government has made significant progress in addressing some of these challenges and a decrease in health funding is likely to reverse its efforts. This is particularly important for infectious diseases such as HIV/AIDS, TB and malaria whose treatment plays an important role in their control.

With the imminent conclusion of the Health Transition Fund (HTF) support programme, and the prevailing national budgetary situation the next question that arises is what can government do to increase fiscal space in order to increase funding for health services? This is particularly important given the fact that more than 70 percent of the country’s population relies on the public sector for health care services – and hence the need for it to be adequately funded. Given the significance of public investment in enhancing the prospects for equitable, inclusive economic growth and social development, it is imperative that the government explore options to increase social spending and employment-generating economic investments – that is creating fiscal space for these activities.

This article does not at this stage attempt to come up with answers on how to increase fiscal space for social sectors, including health in Zimbabwe. It concludes by simply stating some of the major options that have been raised in literature for increasing fiscal space, in order to provoke thoughts and debate on the options for further exploration within the context of Zimbabwe. These include the following: a) re-allocating / re-prioritizing public expenditures, b) increasing tax revenues, c) lobbying for increased aid and transfers, d) tapping into fiscal and foreign exchange reserves, e) borrowing and restructuring existing debt, and f) adopting a more accommodative macroeconomic framework. These and other fiscal space options need to be examined carefully taking into consideration the potential risks and trade-offs associated with each opportunity.

Benson Zwizwai is a Lecturer of Macroeconomic Theory and Policy, and Development Economics in the Economics Department of the University of Zimbabwe.

Universities must look beyond A-Level

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nyaminyami

NYAMI NYAMI . . . Zimbabwe’s stone sculpture ranks among the best in the world, yet, there is a dearth of scholarship in fine art in the country

Knowledge Mushowe Art Zone
The just-ended Zimbabwe International Trade Fair (ZITF) in Bulawayo was an ideal eye opener for Zimbabwe tertiary institutions’ art educators.The exhibition stands for tertiary institutions offering art degrees and diplomas were inundated by individuals from all walks of life enquiring about how they could enrol as students.

The phrase, “I never did Art at A-Level” became a chorus at the exhibition park.

The majority of potential applicants, particularly those that visited Chinhoyi University of Technology’s Creative Art and Design School did not identify themselves primarily as artists.

Members of the country’s uniformed forces were among those interested, as were primary and high school teachers, as well as nurses and freelance “park” photographers.

One policeman aptly contextualised his reasons for wanting to know more by saying: “It’s not like I want to leave the profession and start a new career. I have always wanted to be a policeman and I am happy at work. But I feel further education is important and, because art has been my passion for years, I need to find ways to communicate visually and more effectively with the public.”

For art educators, the overwhelming interest by members of the public is a clear testament that potential applicants to their institutions are not just A-Level art students.

Advanced Level art students have the experience and passion required for one to succeed at university level, but they are not the only suitable candidates.

There are some “closet” artists in our midst that, for one reason of the other, do not openly showcase their talents to the public.

Some do not choose to do art at Advanced Level because their parents may disapprove, or because they feel they can obtain more points with other subjects.

Yet in their spare time, they feel the need to be creative.

Others never got the chance to go to university, owing to pressing family or personal commitments.

The entry requirements for university students should therefore not emphasise on students having some class experience with art because those that take up art as a subject in primary and secondary schools are only a fraction of the creative population.

By accepting students with interests in other fields, tertiary institutions may enhance multiple sectors as the creative personnel find alternative ways to communicate.

Other artists, such as freelance amateur photographers and young sculptors may, through higher education, get theoretical and conceptual understanding of their crafts so that they know that there is a clear distinction between good and bad art.

Some amateur photographers may not know specifics such as aperture settings, shutter speed or photo editing software.

The passion for art is nonetheless there and the quest for more knowledge AND RESEARCH will always be abundant in every artist.

Art education was never meant to be an exclusive club.

Workers in the hospitality and tourism sector, for example, would benefit with art education.

Not only will they learn to understand and appreciate the art that surrounds their industry, they may also use knowledge in graphic design, sculpture, public art, photography and film and video to create their own theme-related products.

Those in the health sector may also use similar skills to inform and educate the public on health-related issues such as typhoid, cholera, HIV and AIDS, tuberculosis and Ebola.

The skills to apply drawing skills to particular messages are only obtained at tertiary level as secondary and primary school art education emphasises on observational skills.

It is important that each of Zimbabwe’s economic sectors embrace creative personnel.

Advertising agencies are charging a fortune for small and simple things that one can do alone with minimum fuss.

While lamenting the lack of collective efforts in art education, a dean from a local prominent university asked,

”Zimbabwe has a rich fine art tradition; its stone sculpture tradition ranks among the best in the world. Yet, there is a dearth of scholarship in fine art in the country. We grow (or at least used to) a lot of cotton in Zimbabwe, yet our clothing industry has all but collapsed. Why is it that in a country with a great stone sculpture tradition valorised worldwide there is no university level scholarship and research in fine art? Why is it that in a country with vast supply of cotton there is not much left of the textile industry?”

The statement shows that art is not created for art’s sake.

He gave the example of the textile industry but the truth is that art is directly related to just about every industry in our country.

Looking to educate only a section of our society because they may have previous experience with art may be counter-productive.

Open the gates and encourage all to come out and see just how much value addition they will effect in a variety of sectors.

Art is for artists, and they are everywhere.

 

Britain’s leap into the unknown

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David Cameron

David Cameron

Matthew d’ Ancona Correspondent
“The impetus of existing plans is always stronger than the impulse to change.” So wrote Barbara W. Tuchman in her great 1962 account of World War I, “The Guns of August” — a book admired by President John F. Kennedy and much quoted by politicians since.In the final days of Britain’s general election campaign, Mrs Tuchman’s warning about the perils of fighting new battles according to old rules is as resonant as ever.

For most of the 20th century, power oscillated reliably between the Conservative and Labour parties.

From 1979 to 1997, the right-of-centre Tories governed without interruption; thereafter, the left-of-centre Labour Party had its turn on the bridge, until 2010.

Since then, David Cameron, the Conservative prime minister, has managed a bipartisan administration in coalition with the centrist Liberal Democrats, led by Nick Clegg.

Mr Cameron’s objective in this election is to escape the necessity of this alliance and govern with a clear majority in the House of Commons. His Labour opponent, Ed Miliband, seeks a parallel outcome for his own party.

On the campaign trail, both leaders behave as though the electorate ought to choose between them alone, on a presumption that the familiar two-party system remains the default position of British democracy.

Mr Cameron asks for five more years to complete the task of economic repair he began in 2010.

Mr Miliband insists that a radical change of trajectory is required to spread the benefits of recovery more equitably and close the gap between rich and poor.

It is true that one or the other will be prime minister after Thursday’s election; nobody else is in the frame.

But opinion polls consistently suggest that neither party will win a majority of parliamentary constituencies.

This indicates that a fundamental shift is afoot — and that Conservative and Labour rhetoric is far removed from a drastically shifting reality. Soar above the hurly-burly of the campaign and you will see a political map in flux.

For a start, the presence of the Liberal Democrats in the Conservative-led coalition has transformed their perceived role in the electoral ecology. Before 2010, this smaller party was essentially a protest movement with a parliamentary wing: It attracted those who wished to vote for “none of the above,” to express disenchantment with both the government and the main opposition, or to register outrage over a specific issue like the Iraq war.

Mr Clegg was, in my view, absolutely right to lead his party into joining the Tories in coalition five years ago. But the Liberal Democrats have paid a heavy political price for that metamorphosis into a party of government and are set to lose many, perhaps most, of the 56 constituencies they hold in the House of Commons (out of a total of 650 seats). Even Mr Clegg’s seat, in Sheffield, is at risk.

As support for the Liberal Democrats has contracted, so nationalist parties in Britain’s component countries have gained in popularity: in Wales, Plaid Cymru; in England, the UK. Independence Party; and most spectacularly, the Scottish National Party, which is expected to win a great many of Scotland’s 59 parliamentary seats, principally at Labour’s expense.

An unforeseen consequence of this new political landscape is that the undoubted star of the campaign is not even standing for election to the British Parliament.

Nicola Sturgeon, the Scottish first minister and the nationalists’ leader, has become the object of doting admiration and venomous distrust in roughly equal measure.

Little known outside Scotland until this year, Ms Sturgeon has shone in the broadcast leaders’ debates to such an extent that some English voters have made inquiries to see if there is any way that they can cast their ballot for the S.N.P.

It is a measure of how much has changed, and how fluid British politics has become, that the S.N.P. should be in this position, having suffered what appeared to be an epochal setback only seven months ago.

The decisive rejection of Scottish independence in September’s referendum was widely expected to drain the party of morale and purpose. In fact, precisely the opposite has occurred.

Indeed, a general election that started life as a routine argument about the future of the British economy has morphed into an intense struggle over the future composition of Britain itself. If Labour needs S.N.P. support in the House of Commons in order to govern, you can be sure that the Scots will set the price high.

As Alex Salmond, the previous S.N.P. leader, put it early in the current campaign: “If you hold the balance, then you hold the power.”

This much is clear as the kaleidoscope is shaken. No party is likely to win a majority, and the mood in Westminster— let alone the country — is positively hostile to the formation of a second, full-blown coalition.

Whatever pact emerges from this most curious of elections is likely to be loose-knit, and perhaps no grander than an informal understanding between two or more parties to consider each parliamentary vote on its merits and to avoid, if possible, a second election that would be ruinously expensive.

A key consequence will be that Parliament, so often considered a marginal force in government, will dominate political life once more. How pleasingly democratic that sounds. But the gap between this particular kind of parliamentary oversight and the collapse of a minority administration is not great.

Not much gets done in any nation without a measure of political stability. Nobody invests in a capricious, fickle country. Holding the realm to ransom from vote to vote in the Commons is not the same as healthy accountability.

What lies on the far side of this election is less predictable than in any other since World War II. Nobody can make a reliable forecast beyond the powerful impression of impending uncertainty and cacophony.

The thrill of the new, of course, is a seductive sensation. In this case, though, I suspect that the thrill will be short-lived.- New York Times

Matthew d’Ancona is a political columnist for The Guardian and The Evening Standard.

Editorial Comment: PSMAS service providers must be patient

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ZIMPAPERSIt is difficult to understand why 30 or so doctors, optometrists and laboratories decided to sue Premier Service Medical Aid Society for outstanding claims and the action by PSMAS not to accept future claims from these providers does make sense.There is no dispute over the facts.

PSMAS recognises that the claims are valid, and has put them in the payment queue and was going to pay them as the cash came in, generally from employers deducting subscriptions from members, but delaying the forwarding of these subscriptions. A lawsuit is unlikely to obtain a more rapid payment. The problem is not a deliberate decision not to pay providers, or a problem of solvency.

Everyone knows, since PSMAS these days is very open about its financial position, that the society is solvent, in that its assets outnumber its debts, but is extremely illiquid because of delays in forwarding membership subscriptions.

As a result, service providers are paid far later than they should be, and we sympathise with those who provide services and then wait months for payment.

The society was in far more serious financial trouble last year when administration costs were far too high the percentage of total costs; then chief executive Dr Cuthbert Dube was being paid more than $500 000 a month in salary and allowances and a group of executives was receiving pay packages far in excess of what their jobs demanded and what the society could pay.

But that has been fixed by firing Dr Dube and converting the overpaid posts into new posts that are properly paid, but not outrageously so.

Most service providers are showing patience with PSMAS knowing that the Government, easily the biggest employer of PSMAS members has promised some substantial reductions this year in its debt to the society and other employers coming under serious pressure from the society to do something about their debts.

Some service providers, who have cash-flow problems of their own, have followed a more sensible course by declining to accept PSMAS cards and asking members for cash, advising these members to claim back from the society later. While this is unpleasant, at least it fits the facts.

PSMAS has pushed back a bit. Advising the 30 suing providers that they should now charge PSMAS members cash does, in effect, encourage these members to move to other providers still willing to honour the society’s cards.

When things return to normal, it is those providers who will benefit, not those who are seeking a weird short-term solution that is unlikely to work.

Medical aid largely works on trust. This means that members pay, that employers who deduct from payrolls pass on the deductions, plus their own share of the subscriptions if that is part of the employment deal, that providers provide services on credit and claim from the societies, and that the societies ensure they are properly managed and pay claims swiftly.

The system is creaking a bit audibly at the moment, but making something worse by suing a society that is not trying to repudiate debts is not going to help.


Escalate economic development, not crisis

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THE REAL CULPRIT . . . Morgan Tsvangirai

Morgan Tsvangirai

Tafara Shumba Correspondent
Ordinarily, a burnt child dreads fire, but history has taught us that some people do not learn from history. At May Day celebrations in Harare, the MDC-T leader, Mr Morgan Tsvangirai, vowed to escalate what he called the crisis in Zimbabwe before finding a solution to it.

In his words, the beleaguered opposition leader said, “I want to say before the crisis ends, we want to escalate it so that we find a solution to it.”

The Standard newspaper attempted a spin on the story to make it less embarrassing.

The tabloid reported that Tsvangirai “vowed during the Workers Day celebrations to escalate the publicity of the crisis.”

It was not a pledge to escalate the publicity of the so-called crisis.

Such political misfiring was better off undefended for it is indefensible. Tsvangirai was unequivocal. He wants to intensify the political and socio-economic crisis brought about by the sanctions he called for.

However, if Tsvangirai had wisdom, he would have learnt from previous experiences that he cannot thrive on human suffering.

The barbaric political scheme of destroying in order to rebuild does not work in the Zimbabwean context.

He called for the sanctions that almost exterminated the populace.

Nevertheless, the people of Zimbabwe remained remarkably resilient during these trying times.

Sanctions dismally failed to catapult Tsvangirai to the presidency.

People still have painful and vivid memories of Tsvangirai calling on South Africa to shut down its borders with Zimbabwe and cut electricity and fuel supplies.

We all wondered if Tsvangirai intended to rule over corpses. He punished people for their democratic rights to choose leaders of their choice.

People were chastised for electing political leaders whose policies and ideologies were compatible with their aspirations.

Tsvangirai’s strategy of attempting to thrive on human suffering has proved to be an absolute political miscarriage.

An attempt to revisit the same strategy only saves to expose the magnitude of intellectual dearth in Tsvangirai.

That evil scheme is tantamount to a man who kidnaps and tortures a woman for her to accept his marriage proposal.

To avoid further torture, that woman can accept the proposal. A principled woman would rather die of the torture than sell her heart to such an evil suitor. Such is Mr Tsvangirai’s favourite political scheme, expired though.

Tsvangirai has since lost relevance in the political field and his replacement will save MDC-T.

Notwithstanding, he is a captain, a player who can also be substituted when he is tired or under-performing.

Tsvangirai is such a tired captain who refuses to be substituted. He can no longer contribute anything to the team and he knows that.

He would rather cause chaos so that the game is abandoned.

Tsvangirai is aware that he will never win an election even as a councillor in Humanikwa. This realisation is what prompts him to boycott elections and pledge to escalate chaos so that “we find solution to it.”

According to Tsvangirai, the escalation of political and economic crisis would force Zanu-PF to a round-table that will usher in another inclusive government.

Another inclusive government is the solution he is envisaging. He tasted the sweetness of power when he got into government through the back door in 2009.

Thus, Tsvangirai wants to use the same door to get back into power. One gets into power through the ballot and that is a fundamental democratic tenet.

At a time Zanu-PF is working tirelessly to make the economy work again, Tsvangirai is dreaming of further destroying it.

Zanu-PF believes that the people’s hearts are won by doing well to them first.

One good turn deserves another. That is the principle.

On the other hand, MDC-T wants to win the people’s vote through force and manipulation of all sorts. As the year 2018 is fast approaching, it is incumbent upon the electorate to decide on the better political suitor.

Of late Tsvangirai has been visiting his erstwhile benefactors in the West.

Such visits had an evil agenda.

Soon after he vowed to escalate “the crisis”, he visited Germany.

One can be forgiven if he concludes that Tsvangirai is already on a mission to escalate the crisis.

He is already begging the West to tense up the sanctions in Zimbabwe.

He was so shaken by the re-engagement efforts between the West and Zanu-PF Government. He was also taken aback by the sudden withdrawal of funding from the West, thus all these desperate moves are attempts to win back the goodwill of the west.

Unfortunately, the West has realised that they have been throwing their money into a bottomless pit.

They have belatedly become conscious that they cannot continue laying a bet on Tsvangirai, an eternal loosing horse.

In Tsvangirai, their regime change project will be a miscarriage. This is the chief reason why they have sponsored a splinter group from the MDC-T.

Indeed, they are justified, for Tsvangirai has no plan of winning an election. How can he win an election through a boycott? You do not stand a chance until you are in the game. That is the principle.

The peace loving people of Zimbabwe must not be hoodwinked into partaking in projects that seek to give political mileage to Tsvangirai. Tsvangirai does not have the people at heart. He was in the inclusive government for four years and what he did during that stint is a clear testimony that his is a revolution for self enrichment.

The political crisis, he is urging people to engage in, will never extricate this country from the economic quagmire occasioned by the sanctions.

Instead of calling for the escalation of the economic crisis, he must escalate economic development. This way, he will become a responsible opposition leader and might become a darling for some citizens.

The workers must know that they will take the strain of the economic crisis.

They must count themselves luck that they are still at work while the majority of their peers are now in the streets because of the sanctions. They must be clever enough to locate the source of their current misery.

Tsvangirai betrayed them when he sided with imperialist employers to form a “labour movement” that ironically works at cross-purpose with the aspirations of the workers.

Lovemore Matombo and Japhet Moyo can testify that the MDC-T has since veered off course.

The two trade unionists have, in the past separately berated the MDC-T for dumping the founding values of the party, which was to advance the working class agenda.

Tsvangirai was not supposed to have addressed the workers in the first place.

That was a typical politicisation of trade unionism. If it had been Zanu-PF, the MDC-T would have cried foul.

They have of late cried foul over the appointment of military men and women into civilian jobs.

A visit from new relatives

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farming

These unidentified men clear a field during a work party like what used to happen long ago when the extended family unit was still intact

Sekai Nzenza on Wednesday
MY aunt, or Tete from Gutu and her Apostolic group of women friends clad in white robes were coming to stay for one night on their way to all-night prayers outside Harare last week.“What time will you arrive?” I asked Tete while she was still in Gutu , the night before they were to get into a kombi to Harare.

She said they would be at Mbare by 1pm.

My cousin Piri waited for them so she could guide them to my place.

They arrived at 7pm, when it was already dark.

“Tauya!” Piri said.

“We have arrived!” She walked in to the lounge, carelessly throwing a big bag full of fresh peanuts, pumpkins and water melons, gifts from Tete.

I was relaxed on the sofa having finished cooking sadza and meat for Tete and what I thought were two or maybe three of her fellow worshippers.

“I hope you have enough room,” Piri whispered into my ear.

“Madzibaba are also here.”

Madzibaba?

These were the male apostolic sect members. Tete did not mention that she was bringing men as well to my house.

Then my visitors started coming in. In front were four men in their white robes, with shaved heads and long beards and hooked Shepherd’s crooks like what you see in Biblical photos of prophets. Behind them was my Tete, looking elderly with her walking stick.

She is about 65-years-old now and her knees are sore.

But she says prayer takes away the pain of arthritis each day, not tablets.

Right behind Tete were three women, and a girl of about 10 years.

I welcomed them. Seeing the surprise in my eyes, Piri kept on hiding her giggles.

After the greetings, the men found a spot outside in the garden. They asked for firewood and lit a fire under the moonlight.

The women moved into one spare big bedroom and sat on the carpet.

“They want tea,” said Piri.

“While I am making the tea, you can make another extra pot of sadza.”

She made two big pots of tea and added large quantities of sugar and powdered milk.

Then she filled two trays with buttered bread and sun jam.

She served Madzibaba first and then the women.

One of the women, Madzimai Bathsheba, pulled out a basin from her bag and inside it was cooked rice with peanut butter.

On top of the rice was a pile of salted fried fish, matemba.

From another bag, she took out a brown bag with cooked sweet potatoes.

All the food that had travelled from Gutu was placed on the tray alongside the bread.

Then we feasted on the food.

When we were all full, Madzimai relaxed and waited for the sadza and nyama.

“This will teach you a lesson Sis. You do not say to village people, ‘yes, come over, yes, and bring your friends.’ That is not done. We are not living in the village anymore. Where will all these people sleep?” Piri asked me when we were busy dishing out the food in the kitchen.

There was room for three or maybe four women.

All the other rooms had a couple of relatives or children.

It was school holidays and my little nephews and nieces from the village were here to enjoy bread and tea, ice-cream and all the junk food that they would not get in the village.

Piri was determined to rub this in until Madzibaba and Madzimai left for the prayer night tomorrow afternoon.

I shrugged and said nothing, thinking of the times back in the village when visitors were always welcome.

Back in the village, our visitors were usually relatives from my mother’s village.

They came during the harvest.

These were mostly the wives of my mother’s brothers and nephews, coming to provide help in the fields.

They knew that my mother had several children who were still too young to harvest maize, beans, groundnuts, nyimo, sorghum and millet.

My mother never asked how long the five or more relatives were going to stay, because it was the work that would determine the length of stay.

In those pre-independence days, we grew a lot of food and the rains used to come on time.

My mother’s people worked in the fields from early morning till late.

Throughout the day, while working, there were stories told and much laughter.

My mother killed a few chickens and one or two goats.

Our relatives then left with half a basket each of grain from the harvest, so they could show the people back home that my mother had been a successful farmer.

Our visitors returned to their homes when we still wanted them to stay.

“These apostolic visitors are just like any of our relatives from afar,” I said this to Piri.

She frowned and hissed something about strange religious freeloaders.

“The only person who really matters here is Tete because she belongs to our blood line. She is our elder. She can come at any time and share this house, the food and everything.”

Piri was being very harsh.

Times have moved. Families have broken down.

Tete has no close family members over there in Gutu.

The apostolic faith is her new family.

She even cares for three little orphaned children because she does not have grandchildren of her own.

Madzibaba and Madzimai were her family. Therefore, by extension , they were our family too.

“Fine, but she should keep the new family in the village, not here. Life is expensive,” Piri said.

I said they were here for only one night. Tomorrow they would go to their zambara or all-night prayer where they would preach and sing by the fire in the hills of Concession.

At bed time, Madzibaba said all four of them would sleep in one room, two on the floor and two on the bed.

Madzimai said they would do the same in another room.

“Overcrowding and unhealthy,” Piri said, when we were alone.

At 6:05am, on Thursday morning, just before sunrise, Piri and I were summoned by Tete to join the apostolic prayer on the bare brick paved floor outside in the driveway.

We were stripped of anything that might remind you of the richness of this earth.

Earrings, wedding rings, necklaces and watches were removed.

Tete covered our heads with a white veil. Then we were ordered to take off our shoes and kneel in front of Madzimai and the one child.

We were all facing east, to the sunrise because when Jesus comes, He will come from the east.

I was cold. Madzibaba Mateu stood a metre or so on my right hand giving orders to the other three Madzibaba.

Tete said I should hold my right hand in the air with my fingers tightly closed together so I could receive the blessings that Madzibaba Mateu was going to ask God to give me.

They started singing, “Emmanuel, Emmanuel.”

After the song, Madzibaba Mateu looked to the sky and made deep noises.

Then he said, I was to be prayed for, kuyereswa.

In his vision, he could see a new illness, something like asthma that would cause me to get breathless in time to come.

To avoid such illness which he could see vividly in the vision God gave him, I should get a fresh jar of honey from the shops.

I will then eat, directly from the jar, one teaspoonful for 12 days.

If I followed these orders, the illness of shortness of breath will never get anywhere near me.

Then Tete and the women sang.

Madzibaba Mateu asked another Madzibaba to draw crosses on my right hand palm, on my forehead and in both my feet.

It was a rather intimate public affair.

A strange man drawing on you.

Piri said she would not want to be prayed for in the morning but would like it to be done in the evening.

Nobody argued with her.

I paid for the kombi that came to take Tete and the worshippers to Concession.

“See, that was not too hard,” I told Piri.

She mocked the whole idea of a jar of honey from the shops. Then she told me that the whole group was coming back to stay one or two nights before the journey back to Gutu.

And they needed money for that journey back to their villages.

By late afternoon on Friday, Madzibaba and Madzimai were back.

The men sat under a tree towards the gate, admiring the oranges on the tree.

They asked for some and Piri gave them only one each.

Inside the house, Tete and her three friends including the child sat with legs outstretched, drinking more tea and eating bread.

They were having an interval before the next prayer because they pray every three hours. There were bits of grass and soil all over the carpet floor. Some of this had travelled all the way from Gutu and from Concession.

“Our new relatives need transport money to return to Gutu tomorrow,” Piri said, smiling with a tone of sarcasm.

“By the way, Madzibaba and Madzimai are not in a hurry to return to their villages.”

I paid for the trip back to Gutu and Tete was very so grateful to have a niece who not only cares for her, but for the rest of her new clan.

After they were gone, Piri laughed and shouted, “Muzvipfidze!” meaning, ‘you have learnt a hard lesson.’

“The city does not have enough food to feed village relatives or enough room for them to sleep. Let them stay in the village,” she said.

Dr Sekai Nzenza is an independent writer and cultural critic.

Election 2015: UK print media’s breathtaking bias

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Bryan Macdonald Correspondent
Anybody walking into a London newsagent at the weekend could be forgiven for thinking that the newspapers have been replaced by party political posters. Fleet Street’s lack of balance is staggering.The klaxon has been sounding for years. British newspaper sales are currently falling at a rate of more than 8 percent annually.

In fact, the now defunct News of the World sold more copies 25 years ago than the 10 nationally distributed London-based Sunday titles can muster together today.

Take the Guardian for example. Staffed by a group of hacks who’ve chosen to follow Oscar Wilde’s advice on self-worship, it’s obsessed with its own importance.

However, its circulation figures are somewhat more sobering. The pompous bastion of liberalism sells 176 000 copies per edition. By contrast, Hello! magazine shifts 276 000.

Proprietors and editors almost universally attribute the collapse of their industry to the rise of the Internet.

This is much too simplistic. In reality, standards have slipped dramatically in recent years, accelerating the decline.

Editorial content is being ripped to shreds by bean counters, creating a vicious circle. With less pagination and staff to generate palatable copy, sales fall even faster leaving less cash to arrest the downward spiral. Facts are no longer sacred and views trump news.

The web delusion

The focus has switched to the holy grail of the web, which shows all the signs of being a fool’s paradise.

A world where reporters don’t leave the building, instead they churn out re-writes of other publication’s copy or press releases. And sub-editors are non-existent. Unless newspapers urgently re-evaluate their direction, the format will soon be dead. Replaced by the citizen journalism nonsense where (often anonymous) numskulls sit around geo-tagging news in their pyjamas.

Armed with the knowledge that their very existence is in peril, you’d expect Fleet Street’s finest to use the spotlight Election 2015 gives them to try some radical changes, wouldn’t you?

The logical course would be to listen to lapsed readers who’ve abandoned the printed Press and younger ones who’ve never bought newspapers. Then, to use the findings to innovate and change direction, perhaps even dragging their titles into the 21st century.

Rather than make use of the left side of their brains, they’ve given even more credence to the right hemisphere. More bias, more emotion. The parochialism turned up to 11. It’s the British version of Seppuku, a Japanese ritual suicide by disembowelment.

Instead of reaching for the future, editors are channelling their inner Kelvin McKenzie and cerebrally dancing like it’s 1985, not 2015. When McKenzie edited The Sun, it sold close to 4 million copies daily (in 1987). Today it flogs a mere 1.97 million.

Children of the revolution

Just as a young Rupert Murdoch once used the Sun to revolutionize British journalism, proprietors desperately need a new vision right now. I expected to see signs of it during this election campaign, instead old habits seem to be more entrenched than ever. For those who love newspapers, it’s painful to watch them slowly die.

Let’s look at some front pages from last week. The Daily Mail has long been an unapologetic supporter of the Conservative Party.

While it has frequently derided Labour in the past, I don’t recall it being as vicious as it is here. Using the least flattering screen-grab possible, it tears into Russell Brand and Ed Miliband. For the record, Brand has 10 times more Twitter followers than the Daily Mail.

The Daily Star, owned by UKIP acolyte Richard Desmond, also lays into the pair, describing the Labour leader as ‘Red Ed.’ While slightly left of center, Miliband is hardly a kindred spirit of Castro.

A day earlier, the Daily Mail went further than the ‘Red Ed’ insult. They went the whole hog and inferred that he was a ‘Stalinist.’

The Sun, which fervently backs David Cameron’s Tories, joined in with a slur on Miliband’s mental health.

That headline was sandwiched between two astonishing front pages. In the first, the Sun, owned by the billionaire Rupert Murdoch, used an ‘ordinary bloke’ to convey its master’s message.

Two days later, the red-top attempted to instruct its readers to vote Tory.

On the other side of the divide, the Mirror (the last tabloid loyal to Labour) is equally adept at agitprop. Here it plays its usual ‘heartless Tory’ card.

Meanwhile, last Sunday the Mail On Sunday delivered a piece of propaganda that would have earned the editors at Pravda the deposit on a new Volga car, in 1972.

Not to be outdone, the Guardian has also shed any presence of neutrality. On Saturday, it publicly backed Labour.

Bango: The woman behind Empretec

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Ruth Butaumocho
“A woman with a voice is by definition a strong woman. But the search to find that voice can be remarkably difficult.”

The above quote from American philanthropist and businesswoman Melinda Gates perfectly fits into Ms Sibusisiwe Precious Bango’s narrative, a story that speaks volumes about the journey she has travelled and the odds she defied to join the ranks of successful businesswomen in Zimbabwe.

Ms Bango is the chief executive officer of Empretec Zimbabwe, an organisation promoting entrepreneurship. She is also the deputy president of Proweb and a successful businesswoman who is into mining and tourism.

Like many women in her camp, Ms Bango has managed to redefine power by building her own business, joining the clique of the female populace in Zimbabwe managing successful enterprises. She is determined to succeed in her endeavours.

“Entrepreneurship is an inborn thing. I grew up in a family where I never saw my father working for anybody, because he was a businessman.

“I learnt from an early age that running your own business was an honourable thing, a virtue that I still strongly hold on to,” she said in an interview recently.

Ms Bango has to date assisted and mentored hundreds of women and men across Zimbabwe to venture into different businesses, while creating thousands of jobs in the process.

She remains a beacon of hope to individuals who possess brilliant business ideas, but have no entrepreneurial skills and money to kick-start their projects.

“My father played a pivotal role in honing my entrepreneurial skills. He believed that business opportunities are everywhere, so long as one is committed to work hard,” enthused Ms Bango.

Inspired by her father who had a fleet of taxis in the 1980s, Ms Bango was determined to venture into business, a development that saw her enrol for an Honours degree in Business Studies and later acquire a Master of Business Administration from the University of Zimbabwe.

On completion she joined Bulawayo City Council’s treasury department, where she carried out different duties, including handling the investment portfolio of the municipality. Ms Bango said working for Bulawayo City Council, which was one of the best municipalities back then in the 1980s, gave her the much needed exposure and experience in honing her entrepreneurial interest.

“The five years that I spent with Bulawayo City Council gave me good exposure in understanding financial systems, policies and by-laws. That period laid a good foundation for my future plans as an entrepreneur and crucial experience, which I still use to this day,” she recalls.

Equipped with the experience she had amassed at the local authority, Ms Bango went into the private sector where she worked as an economic empowerment consultancy, before joining Empretec, where she is at the helm of the organisation.

Despite straddling the length and breadth of the country, engaging in various portfolios, Ms Bango held on to her dream of becoming an entrepreneur of repute.

Although she was engaged in various small projects when she was in full employment, the ventures were not good enough to fulfil her aspirations of becoming a fully-fledged businesswoman.

Her breakthrough came when she joined Empretec to steward the organisation that was regarded as a powerhouse in promoting entrepreneurship across.

“When I became part of the organisation in the late 1990s, I knew that I would now be able to fulfil my aspirations by imparting information and also learning from others.”

Ms Bango however concedes that her achievements have not been handed over on a silver platter, but are due to hard work, determination and perseverance.

“Through my interactions, networks and experience, I have been able to build a strong profile. Everyday has its unique experience, but I continue to aim higher,” she said.

However, not many women have the same eagle’s view, because of a number of constraints, some which are cultural and remain heavily embedded within societies.

Ms Bango said although gender was becoming less an issue and a determinant in business, women still face unique obstacles that impede their ascendancy, further worsening their economic conditions.

“Some financial institutions do have rigid conditions that discourage women to apply for money. Even society’s attitudes towards women who want to get into business are also discouraging and disempowering.

“But I take great satisfaction that our organisation (Empretec) has mentored women who have become successful businesswomen in different sectors including such areas as energy, transport, construction and information communication technology, areas once dominated by men,” said Ms Bango.

Empretec Zimbabwe, which was set up in 1992 as a joint initiative of UNDP and the Zimbabwe Investment Centre and eventually registered as a Trust in 1997, has to date trained more than 15 000 people.

The organisation has in the past years embarked on a variety of projects working with local and international non-governmental organizations in nurturing and imparting entrepreneurship skills.

A firm believer in female empowerment, Ms Bango said economic independence is a crucial element that every woman should aspire to achieve.

“You cannot claim to be socially empowered if you are not economically empowered.”

Such determination and agility to run for opportunities have also resulted in her being elected to sit on different boards.

Mother of Peace: A cradle for the disadvantaged

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 Sydney Kawadza
Seventeen-years-ago, Lucy Ndakura (not her real name) was born to a mentally challenged woman in Mutoko. She had nowhere to go nor did she know any of her relatives.Even the circumstances leading to her conception had been a mystery to the whole community in Mutoko.

But God had other plans and she soon found herself accommodated at Mother of Peace where she has flourished to be a strong teenage preparing to take the challenges of the world head on.

In a few months, she will be sitting for her Zimsec Ordinary Level examinations.

Her story is not an isolated case. Many have gone through the institution to success. Since its establishment in 1994, Mother of Peace Children’s Home has been the cradle for the disadvantaged in Mutoko and beyond.

The journey has not been smooth for Ms Jean Rally Cornneck, the founder and leader of Mother of Peace.

The 82-year-old believes that there is also a difficult path ahead.

“We have had success stories from the children who have passed through the centre. It’s not an easy journey and we are bracing up for more challenges as we move ahead with our agenda to look for the disadvantaged in our communities,” she said.

There are 75 children at the centre while two are attending tertiary education.

“We have looked after many children at the centre. Some have their own families while others have been reintegrated into society and are living happy lives,” she said.

There are at least 65 men and women who have passed through Mother of Peace and have had another chance in life through the magnanimity of the people at Mother of Peace.

The idea to establish the centre, according to Ms Cornneck, started in 1989 when Mrs Beverley Albers, who is based in South Africa, had a vision.

“She was visited by a spirit. The spirit identified itself as Mother Mary. That is how the Mother of Peace name was coined.

“Mrs Albers saw the image of Mother Mary in a vision and it instructed her in the vision to build communities to care for people who are suffering,” Mrs Cornneck said.

Mrs Albers, she continued, was instructed to look after people afflicted by seven circumstances.

“She was instructed in the vision to look after the terminally ill, including those suffering from HIV and Aids. She was also instructed to look after orphaned children, the physically disabled, the aged and destitute, care for those who are spiritually ill, and this afflicting a lot people who are mentally tortured across the world,” she said.

Ms Cornneck added that there was also need to take care of the caregivers, look for finances for a simple community and caring for God’s bounty thus using the land for self-sustenance.

“The vision also calls for the care of the new order that is taking care of widows who in turn look after their children,” she said.

Ms Cornneck said there are three centres currently operational in Zimbabwe and South Africa.

“Five more centres have been nominated for establishment and land has been acquired for their establishment in Cape Town, Reunion Island, Canada and one in Matopos for Zimbabwe,” she said.

However, in keeping with the care of God’s bounty, there are several projects that have been established for self-sustenance at Mother of Peace.

“We have livestock, poultry and piggery projects. We are also into agriculture that is, summer crops and horticulture.”

The clinic at Mother of Peace has assisted even ordinary villagers in Mutoko. There is also a school that has since been established for children at the home.

“We thought we would cater for children only but the numbers are increasing as parents from the Mutoko community in general are also sending their children to us.

“Our teachers and nurses are paid by the Government and we are grateful for the support from our leaders. We would, however, be glad if our caregivers can be paid through the Government system,” Ms Cornneck said.

She said the centre also had challenges in acquiring inputs for the various projects.

“We grow maize, beans and other crops but we sometimes have challenges in getting seed and fertilisers. Our equipment is also very old,” she said.

The centre also keeps livestock especially cattle for beef and milk production.

“We cannot have more than adequate numbers of cattle because of the urban setting we are found in. Sometimes we kill a beast for the children at the centre for relish.

“The dairy project is helpful. We once had 36 babies so we got $10 000 to establish a dairy project. The cows produce a lot of milk and this has helped us a lot. Sometimes we get surplus for sale,” Ms Cornneck said.

“We also need to build proper structures for our piggery. The poultry project has recorded some success where we get eggs for sale but we want to expand the roadrunner chickens that are popular these days.”

The MP for Mutoko East Ricky Mawere has pledged to give the centre an incubator for hatching eggs at the centre so that they can start hatching chicks.

Projects such as the poultry section have assisted authorities pay even school fees for children at the centre.

“Funding from outside is getting low and we have no choice but to be self-reliant on our projects. We hope to get assistance to boost our projects. We need a tractor for our agriculture activities and large incubators.”

Mr Cornneck paid tribute to the late Mr Paul Fenes who was assisting at the centre before his unfortunate death last year.

Mr Feres had been working in Zimbabwe since 1985 at St Mary’s in Wedza, Mutemwa Leprosy Centre.

“He sourced for the ambulance and the big generator, two tractors, ovens for our bakery and machinery for our workshop. However, we are thinking of selling some of the equipment to raise funds,” Ms Cornneck said.

Meanwhile, a group of Christian individuals from different denominations and parishes have undertaken to assist Mother of Peace to construct a double classroom block at Divine Primary School which is a satellite of Chinzanga Primary School.

“This project, which is under the theme ‘Building families — building a nation,’ will see the school expanding and meeting part of its five-year-plan to build 5 x 2 classroom blocks by end of 2016,” the group’s spokesperson Rachel Chitate said.

“We expect Mother of Peace children and the local community to benefit by having an onsite school near their homes as opposed to the long distances the children walk on a daily basis.”

She said because of the children’s psycho-social background, a resident school would be most appropriate to do away with stigma and discrimination.

“This model has shown to be a remedy as children’s grades improved tremendously once the children were removed from mainstream schools,” she said.

The group will be hosting a fundraising dinner dance featuring Alexio Kawara on May 29 at Jubilee Hall.

They will also be involved in car washes at different churches, and cake sells.

“A raffle will be conducted in August as part of raising funds, where the winner will be walking away with a beast. The dinner dance is open to the public and the corporate world to assist Mother Peace Centre.”

There are currently 56 children at Mother of Peace.

Among the staff at the centre are 14 caregivers, general staff at the farm and other projects, school and clinic.

 Feedback: sydney.kawadza@zimpapers.co.zw

Caring for someone ill at home

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“Island Hospice is a charitable organisation which provides care to those suffering from life-threatening illnesses and the bereaved.”

Special Correspondent

Across our 35 years of experience in the field, we have gathered together some principles regarding caring for the ill that we have found to be helpful to caregivers in the home. At Island Hospice and Healthcare (Island), we call those who care for the ill at home and in the community ‘caregivers’.

At Island Hospice we understand that caring for someone who is ill is a serious, demanding job, not to be taken lightly, but with great care and consideration.

It is a great responsibility but it also offers huge satisfaction and rewards. It is a privilege as well as an opportunity for personal growth.

What we find most valuable for caregivers is the understanding that the caregiver needs to be just as intentional about caring for themselves as they are about caring for others.

It is important to realise that although disease and its symptoms happen to the patient, illness has an effect on the whole family. Caring for a patient suffering from a life threatening illness at home can be rewarding, however it is physically and emotionally draining for both the caregiver and the family.

A critical issue that often affects caregivers is the feelings of helplessness or hopelessness associated with caring for someone they love in the most difficult season of their lives.

People facing terminal diagnosis may make you feel helpless, angry or useless. A person suffering from HIV/AIDS may remind you of your own losses, or make you afraid that this may happen to you.

Our counsel to carers is that they need to:

◆ accept and express their feelings

◆ pay attention to their own personal issues as they arise and not delay intervention

◆ accept feedback or constructive criticism from others

◆ know that there may be times when you cannot help

◆ cope with strong feelings from the patient without feeling useless or taking it personally.

Dealing with people who are facing death as a result of their illness, will make you aware of the fact that one day you, too, will die.

It is very important that you understand and recognise your own feelings about death and dying because if you do not, then your feelings of fear and anxiety will prevent you from providing care well.

As well as helping others, you need to be able to ask for help and support for yourself – someone to listen to your fears and sadness. It is important that you examine your own feelings about the illness of the person you are caring for.

If it is a disease such as AIDS then you need to look at your own attitudes about people who have AIDS. If you have prejudices about people with AIDS (PWAs) then you will judge them in a negative way and this may affect the quality of the care the patient will receive.

◆ If you would like to know more or have any questions regarding the issues discussed in this article, please contact us at enquires@islandhospice.co.zw

Working for fallen heroes

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Christopher Farai Charamba Features Writer
There are many forms of sacrifice. Some make sacrifices for personal gain while others do it as a form of service for what they stand for and believe in.On November 23, 1977 some 6 000 men, women and children sacrificed their lives when the Rhodesian forces bombed Chimoio camp in Mozambique.

Their sacrifice was part of the overall movement that freed Zimbabwe from colonial rule.

In the post-independent Zimbabwe, the area where the ZANLA camp stood has been turned into a shrine honouring the 6 000 people who lost their lives.

Interspersed at different locations are mass graves with the remains of people from the different camps including Nehanda, Takawira, Chindunduma, Percy Ntini and Chitepo.

Since 2014, two gentlemen from the area Martino Augusto and Francisco Fernando, (both aged 28) have sacrificed their time and ability to tend to the Chimoio shrines as caretakers.

Theirs is a sacrifice because they have no obligation to the fallen heroes as they are not Zimbabwean.

What they have done has not been out of a sense of duty but compassion, for those that lost their lives at Chimoio did so for the people of Zimbabwe.

“We have been working here since 2014 and do so because it is a calling for us. I think that the comrades that are resting here guided us and wanted us to come and look after them,” Augusto said.

The work involves tending to the grounds, making sure the grass is cut, removing weeds from the mass graves, guarding the area as well as assisting visitors on tour of the Chimoio shrines.

Augusto added: “It is difficult work that we do here. The grounds are big and we have to make sure that they are tidy, that the grass is cut and that everything is in order for the comrades. We look after them and at the same time they look after us.”

Working at the shrines has not been without incident that might in other circumstances have led others to forsake such a job but Augusto and Fernando believe that the spirits of the people resting at Chimoio take care of them.

“There are things that happen here that are difficult for us to explain or understand. For example, sometimes in the middle of the night we hear gunshots coming from the building which is now the museum.

“We would have arranged the guns in order but come the next day they will be scattered all over. No one can explain how this happens and although some people might find it scary we just continue with our work because we believe the comrades will take care of us,” Fernando said.

Offering an example of how sacred the Chimoio shrines are and how the spirit of the place protects them, Augusto and Fernando tell the tale to the Children of Zimbabwe National Liberation War Veterans Association on a tour of Chimoio of how a local farmer saw his car mysteriously catch fire after he had insulted them.

“When the man came here we were cutting grass. He then called out, we came to him and he asked us if we worked here. We replied that we did and he went on to say we were fools and crazy for looking after these dead people, why would you take such a job he asked.

“He then left and we went to sit by one of the shrines. We were deeply hurt by his comments to the point of crying. We thought to ourselves what the man was saying was true? Were we really crazy and should we quit the job?

“A couple of hours later the man returned and we could see him from where we were sitting. As he tried to open the gate his wife called out that their car was on fire. The car just erupted into flames and the whole thing burnt.

“He asked us for help but we asked him how he expected two crazy people to help him? Some days later he came to collect the wreckage and the car he came in also caught fire in the same way the first one did.

“This is how we knew that we are protected by the spirit of those resting here. The work we do is important and not in vain.”

Over the years both Mozambicans have learnt to speak Shona fluently and have developed a relationship with Comrade Future Pariano, one of the tour guides and survivors of the Chimoio bombings, as well as with Manicaland Provincial Minister Cde Mandi Chimene.

“These ladies are always here and have helped us a lot. They have helped us get salaries from the Zimbabwean Government for the work that we do here,” Augusto said.

The current economic crisis in Zimbabwe has however affected the two gentlemen’s salaries and they were last paid in November last year.

Cde Pariano has therefore taken an initiative to collect what she calls “love offerings” from touring groups to donate to the gentlemen.

“These gentlemen have been working here for years and look after the place. It is therefore important that we as Zimbabweans show our appreciation to those that look after our shrines for us.

“The love offering is meant to be a donation from all the people who visit the place that can assist these men and their families particularly now when their salaries have not come in. I believe it is the least we can do for them.”

Both Augusto and Fernando have been appreciative of the support they have received from the people of Zimbabwe particularly from the two comrades who regularly go out to visit the shrines.

Cde Pariano is hopeful that in future more will be done to develop the Chimoio shrines into a better tourist destination and in turn contribute to raising more funds for Augusto and Fernando.

“This place is an important part of Zimbabwean history and all Zimbabweans, young and old, should visit here to understand the sacrifices made for our independence.

“We hope that we can build a shelter for people to come here and sleep as well as develop the museum a bit more. The more people come to visit the more beneficial it would be to the country as well as the people that work here,” she said.

The Children of Zimbabwe National Liberation War Veterans Association had embarked on a maiden tour to Chimoio in Mozambique as part of their orientation and education and to visit some of the places their parents had lived in during the liberation war.

 

Feedback: christopher.charamba@zimpapers.co.zw


Vending shelters: White elephants?

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vendors

Vendors do business on the streets of Harare

Fortious Nhambura
In the past, shouts of vendors selling their wares were only common in the high density residential areas. Carrying sacks containing sweeping brooms, homemade floor polish, reed mats, scouring powder or toilet cleaners, the vendors became a wake up call for many people in the western suburbs of Harare.

Mbare Musika was another haven of vendors though they used to fight running battles with municipal police as vending was illegal.

At first vending was a trade for the poor and uneducated. It took courage to take up vending.

Only those who had failed to secure formal employment took up vending.

That was life back then.

The downturn in economic performance in the late 1990s and the economic sanctions that followed the commencement of the land reform programme have forced many into vending.

Vending became the in-thing with even the gainfully employed looking for something to sell to augment their incomes.

With time, vendors moved into Harare’s central business district, starting downtown and later the city centre, where they offloaded their wares onto the pavements.

The CBD changed as the pavements became smaller, dirty and crowded. Every street is now occupied by vendors selling tomatoes, sweets, earrings, bangles, shoes, sandals, rat and cockroach pesticides among many others.

Businesspeople, pedestrians and motorists have complained.

The city authorities responded. First, they opened some areas as vending sites where individual flea market operators pay $2 daily for trading space while fruit and vegetable traders pay $1 daily. Still the city remains congested.

Secondly, the city embarked on the construction of vending shelters in designated parts of the city.

One such structure is being built in Mbare’s National section. Vendors are expected to be accommodated there and move out of the city centre.

But the question is, is the construction of vending shelter the panacea to Harare’s congestion?

Vendors say they are comfortable doing business in the city centre where there is a ready market and not in the areas outside the city centre.

Mary Mapfumo (22) says she wants to be located where there is a market and that can only be in the city centre.

“I want to fend for my family; council wants to keep Harare free of people like us. The only way is to create a cheap stall in the city centre for vendors.

“We are trading in small items and our returns are small and that makes it almost impossible to pay the rentals demanded of us from council. I am sure these shelters will become white elephants as no one is willing to be taken off the market in the name of bringing sanity to CBD. I have to survive and my survival is on the streets of Harare,” she said.

Another vendor, Maxwell Jaricha of Mabvuku, said it was unfortunate that Harare City Council had not consulted the vendors on the siting of vending shelters.

“In the past it was easy to put vending sites outside the CBD but times have moved and it’s no longer profitable to relocate to Mbare and other suburbs. Business is now in town and that is why I moved to sell my second-hand clothes in the city.

“I am not going back to Mabvuku where my earnings will plummet.

“The city centre is where people meet. Here my clientele is diversified and bigger. I am likely to get someone from Kuwadzana, Budiriro or Mutare buy my wares unlike in Mabvuku where I have to deal with the local people only,” he said.

National Vendors Union of Zimbabwe president Mr Stanely Zvorwadza said construction of vending shelters was no panacea to decongestion of Harare city.

He said the city council must come up with an all-stakeholder driven programme that would ensure that both vendors and the city authorities get the best results.

“It’s unfortunate that as an association representing vendors we were not consulted. Had we been consulted we would have put in our reservations and a better site found. That market shelter could be a waste of resources and is no reprieve to congestion in the city. That site along Simon Mazorodze will not find takers as it is far from the city centre. What has brought vendors into the city is actually the market and trying to take them out the CBD will be futile,” he said.

The NAVUZ president said vendors would not relocate there as it meant increasing their overheads through rentals and transport costs.

“We want to cooperate with council and cooperate in decongesting the city but they seem unwilling. The country should not be looking at making money from vendors as we get small margins from our work. Relocating to centres outside the capital will be unprofitable. That site is ill-advised and has even been condemned by those in the upper end of the small and medium enterprises sector.

“It would have been acceptable if the shelters were located close to the city so that people can walk to buy household wares before boarding kombis home,” he said.

Mr Zworwadza said the most ideal place for siting vending shelters should have been the civic centre grounds as they are not only near to the city but conveniently located as the majority of Harare’s commuters either use the Copacabana, Charge Office or Market Square terminus.

“Those stalls are easy to market and most acceptable to vendors because of their proximity to town. The shelters could then be divided into sections according to the wares the vendors would be selling otherwise the chaos would continue. For instance, people should know where to go if they want cell phones and their accessories, vegetables and foodstuffs or clothing.

It is easy to accommodate vendors in the city without causing congestion. Council must know that proper siting of market shelters will improve revenue for the city and hence the need to involve stakeholders.

Vendors are willing to pay but they cannot pay when they are not sheltered. Of the estimated 100 000 vendors operating in Harare only 6 000 are paying to city council as most are operating from undesignated spaces.

“I am sure properly located vending shelters can be popularised the same manner Mupedzanhamo has become in Harare. Harare can accommodate all the vendors without problems if it copies the model of India that has managed to incorporate the SMEs sector into its economy,” he said.

City of Harare spokesperson Mr Michael Chideme, however, dismissed the fears that the shelters would take vendors out of the market saying they would create an orderly and clean environment that would attract more people to the stalls.

“The relocation of the informal sector to designated sites is a process that requires the buy-in of all stakeholders. The city is engaging all stakeholders to ensure a smooth transition from the present to the ideal.

“In fact the city is in partnership with investors to build new market stalls in Mbare and each of the two to house over 12 000 vending tables. Our consultations note that the informal sector requires decent and sheltered sites to do business.

“The shelters are not taking the vendors from the market but are actually creating a conducive market that attracts the market through order and cleanliness,” he said.

Town Planner Mr Percy Toriro said recently while vending exists in every city in the world, the only thing that differs was how it is planned, conducted and managed.

He added that provision of space for vendors was a critical component in resolving Harare congestion.

“It is also about appropriate sites. We have seen many vending stalls that are underutilised because of poor siting. But it can also be an attitude issue where the vendors do not realise that new markets can be created.

“Authorities need not provide everything themselves. They can just provide space and ask the private sector or other interested organisations to come and develop the spaces to acceptable standards,” he added.

“In such cases, it is important to also build the business capacity of vendors so that they see themselves as entrepreneurs rather than just poor people,” he suggested.

 Feedback to fortious.nhambura@zimpapers.co.zw

Editorial Comment: Increase in ethanol blending progressive

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ZIMPAPERSEthanol blending resumed with the Government yesterday announcing the increase in the mandatory blending ratio back to 10 percent from 5 percent though sometimes unleaded petrol was available.Prior to blending, Zimbabwe used its little reserves of foreign currency to import 100 percent of its petrol requirements, losing the very liquidity it requires to boost the economy.

Zimbabwe is a landlocked country that does not produce, at least for now, any petroleum products and relies on imports.

Fuel is vital for virtually most economic activities and the price at which it is secured is important.

Because Zimbabwe is a price taker and bystander in the dynamics that influence the price of petrol on world markets, only what it does internally can cushion it from what happens externally.

Until July last year, global oil prices were rising and like many non-oil producers, Zimbabwe had to pay through the nose to oil its economic activities, a development that has a negative effect on inflation.

As such, we can only pray that the situation in the country with regard to production of ethanol can only improve rather than get worse.

It is our fervent hope that Zimbabwe will continue, gradually, to increase the ethanol blending threshold to levels that will see the country saving significantly more by cutting on imports of petrol.

It is thus important to note that this can only happen if Government addressed ethanol production challenges, such as what happened in December last year, to ensure consistent supply of adequate ethanol for traders to blend unleaded petrol.

Apart from making sure that arda and its partners, Macdom and Rating, increase cane production to meet higher blending thresholds, more producers should be licensed to secure supply.

The precedent everyone would not want to recur was when Government had to reduce the mandatory blending ratio from 15 percent to 5 percent last December when the sole supplier, Green Fuel, failed to harvest cane due to waterlogged sugar cane fields.

arda chairman Mr Basil Nyabadza on Tuesday said Green Fuel had already started building ethanol reserves to avoid shortage and supply hiccups similar to what happened last December.

It’s, however, difficult to build sufficient reserves as ethanol easily vaporises; empowering farmers to grow sugar cane would be the way to go.

Tongaat Hullet has successfully empowered farmers around its estate in Triangle to grow cane for sugar production, arda should follow the same route.

arda has a lot of idle land in low lying areas which are most suited to the growing of sugar cane.

This is in light of the fact that huge potential economic benefits can be derived from enforcement of higher mandatory blending thresholds, which is common in many parts of the world.

Blends of E10, 10 percent ethanol, or less are used in more than 20 countries around the world, led by the United States, where ethanol represented 10 percent of the US gasoline fuel supply in 2011.

Blends from E20 to E25 have been used in Brazil since the late 1970s. E85 is commonly used in the US and Europe for flexible-fuel vehicles.

Hydrous ethanol or E100 is used in Brazilian neat ethanol and flex-fuel light vehicles and hydrous E15 called hE15 for modern petrol cars in the Netherlands.

Zimbabwe requires an average of $120 million for fuel imports each month, translating to about $1,4 billion on an annual basis. Higher ethanol blending thresholds can significantly cut this outflow.

Tsvangirai’s dictatorial streak stinks

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Morgan Tsvangirai

Morgan Tsvangirai

Peacemaker Zano Correspondent
It is worrisome that the embattled MDC-T leader, Morgan Tsvangirai, continues to cause havoc in his own party due to autocratic rule. One cannot deny that democracy is long dead in Tsvangirai’s party.Recently, the embattled leader visited his party members in Manicaland Province, where he has been fingered in fuelling factionalism. Reports have it that Tsvangirai presided over a meeting with the party provisional leadership in which some of the senior officials were barred from attending.

How can Tsvangirai bar his senior party officials from a meeting? Don’t they contribute meaningfully to your discussions to move the party forward?

It was reported that all those party officials who fell out of favour with the party’s provincial leader, David Chimhini, were not allowed to attend the meeting after they were accused of failing to recognise the party structures.

Tsvangirai sided with Chimhini and did not to quell the chaos.

Tsvangirai’s dictatorship has caused a lot of fissures in his party. Since its inception in 1999, the MDC has been splitting because of Tsvangirai’s dictatorial ruling. In Bulawayo province, it is said that MDC-T deputy leader Thokozani Khupe is on the verge of losing her political career after she challenged her master, Tsvangirai, on the issue of boycotting the June 10 by-elections.

It is a democratic right of every citizen to participate in any elections. However, MDC-T officials and supporters are being deprived of their citizens’ rights to cast their votes by their leader. It is a fact that Tsvangirai doesn’t want anyone who can challenge his position.

For Tsvangirai, democracy is easy in words than in application. A dictator’s first task is to make what he wants popular, bringing the will of the majority in tune with his own will.

Most people were labouring under the assumption that the MDC-T party stood for democracy, a gross misconception. When it comes to democracy, Tsvangirai should be ashamed of himself. Instead, the man should reconsider going back to the drawing board and research more on the qualities of a good leader. As it stands, Tsvangirai’s behaviour is far removed from the characteristics of an aspiring leader.

In his little efforts to rule Zimbabwe, Tsvangirai is going around like a headless chicken, to the amusement of many. Recent reports have it that Tsvangirai is threatening to stage mass protests. This man persistently uses mass protests as a drawcard to his campaigning strategy.

Mass protests will not resolve anything; and history has proven that point time and again. Zimbabweans should therefore refuse to be fooled by this hopeless, power-hungry man. Making public threats to destabilise the economy should not be tolerated.

Tsvangirai borrowed his authoritarian skills from his friends in the Western world. It is true when they say “turning a blind eye to repression is both wrong and counter-productive”. As responsible citizens, MDC-T party members should stop being abused by their leader. They should be able to air their views and be heard. Denying people their basic rights does not preserve stability. In fact, it does the opposite.

No wonder the MDC-T leader has been hit with financial sanctions by its traditional donors, the Westerners. The Western countries who used to fund Tsvangirai have realised that the man is bankrupt of constructive ideas that can remove President Mugabe and the ruling party from power.

In his battle to topple President Mugabe from power, Tsvangirai has now been advised by the Westerners to partner with the former Vice President, Dr Joice Mujuru.

But the big question now is, under which banner?

The truth is, Tsvangirai’s opposition party lacks war credentials. This is the reason why the Westerners are pushing for Tsvangirai to unite with Dr Mujuru. Tsvangirai should therefore read between the lines. His flirtation with politics is long over; worse if he capitulates to become Dr Mujuru’s deputy as desired by the donors.

Actually, he is caught in a Catch-22; if he joins Mujuru, his supporters are sure to abandon him because Dr Mujuru is known for her serious allegations of corruption and subversion.

If he doesn’t, donations won’t be forthcoming. Actually, voters should be spared having to vote for the proposed united party where the dumb will be leading the blind. Which begs the question; what makes the Western world think that a strong party will be formed by uniting Tsvangirai and Mujuru? Such a union has nothing to offer the people of Zimbabwe.

Tribalism: The scourge of Africa

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President Jacob Zuma

President Jacob Zuma

Reason Wafawarova on Thursday
When I followed the debate about remarks attributed to President Mugabe in regards to the Kalanga people, I was compelled to search for the video clip, so I could get a better understanding of what he exactly said.What I heard was a man talking about a stereotype he grew up hearing during the colonial era, a stereotype many Zimbabwean adults would confirm having heard of at one time or another, regardless of what they might have thought about it.

But obviously President Robert Mugabe is not your average ordinary Zimbabwean adult, so the media reaction to his statement is somewhat expected in a context.

Like every other stereotype or prejudice, facts and truth matter very little, and rationality is also not essential.

President Mugabe seemed to recall these colonial stereotypes in the context of the xenophobic disturbances that rocked South Africa a few weeks ago, and essentially what he intended to illustrate was that his idea of outward migration of Zimbabweans into South Africa was mainly a cause bordering on futility, where people without hope in themselves or their environment have dreamed of a glorious life across the border, only to discover that life in South Africa is not that rosy, and then sometimes resort to petty crime. Quite an understandable analogy, given the 4000 criminals Zimbabwe contributes to South Africa’s prison population.

The Government has already issued an official response over what the President said through Minister Jonathan Moyo, its spokesperson, and he has largely blamed the media for sensationalism — capitalising on President Mugabe’s alleged utterances to whip up tribal emotions not only against the person of President Mugabe, but also trying to institutionalise his utterances as reflective of his governing capacities, and indeed, as those of his ZANU-PF party.

It is quite sad that the media started targeting prominent people of Kalanga descent for commentary on the matter, and clearly the intention was to entertain only the angry ones, and to deride and demonise those who failed to display enough wrath against President Mugabe, like Simon Khaya Moyo.

I would have loved to be contacted too on my thoughts about those utterances, and I do not think I need to be of Kalanga descent for the media to be interested in seeking my opinion.

I believe many other people outside the Kalanga tribe would perhaps feel the same.

It is quite dangerous that in this day and age we still have a media driven by narrow tribal agendas.

Tribalism in Africa is a symbol of the continent’s divided soul, and this has been like that since the dawn of independent states in the early 60s.

It is the most discouraging example of a profound impasse to the development of post-colonial Africa.

Tribalism is the clash between peace and unrest, the clash between unity and division, the divide between tribe and nation, the clash between tradition and change, the bane between fact and aspiration, and indeed it is the clash between politics and rationality.

The nationhood of Zimbabwe is being sacrificed on the alter of tribal identities, and important developmental change has been stalled in the name of preserving tradition.

Tribal aspiration has often sidelined important facts, and this is precisely why the facts around the alleged utterances of President Mugabe do not at all matter to those driven by the need to score important tribal goals.

To them this is the time to politically assault a hated opponent, and objectivity is not part of the game.

For political expediency we have seen opposition parties spinning the said utterances in a manner that easily assaults rationality and objectivity, in the process sacrificing political maturity to win cheap political scores.

Obert Gutu of the beleaguered MDC-T even had the temerity to demand the resignation of President Mugabe; and anyone that knows ZANU-PF from a distance however long will know that such a call is not only futile and infantile, but also hopelessly senseless. To his credit, Gutu managed to entertain quite a number of excitable media practitioners, especially those driven by inexorable tribal motives.

His pack of futilities received significant coverage, and most likely Gutu was impressed.

It is really sad to look at Africa today, seeing a billion people tenaciously loyal to primitive ideas of this narrow sense of belonging to some archaic traditional subgroups. Frankly speaking our tribal subgroups represent a history of failure and subjugation, and they are essentially no solution in themselves to the social and economic upheavals challenging the continent.

What have we achieved through this unbridled loyalty to tribal identities? We had the Biafra war, the Rwanda genocide, the Burundi genocide of 1972 and 1988, many other civil wars, the endless tribal fighting in the Congo, and of late the senseless xenophobic killings in South Africa.

We have tribalism on the one hand, and we have nationalism on the other. How can we hope to create through nationalism modern states that will lead us to affluence and power when we carry in our skulls little tribal minds?

Africa needs to unify divisive tribes if the continent is ever going to prosper economically. It is only Africa that has roundly failed to achieve the Millennium Development Goals that were targeted for 2015, and mainly this has been because of our limited way of thinking.

President Jacob Zuma was describing this false expectation of instant progress by South Africans, something that happened in literally every African country after independence. Instead of looking forward to building our post-colonial states, themselves an unfortunate creation of the colonial legacy, what we have seen instead are tribal-minded people inciting unrest and power drives between rival tribes. The politics of Rwanda and Burundi are quite appalling in this regard.

Tribalism is not only the black man’s burden; it is also the grounding of his whole being, and that is the greatest problem we have on the continent.

Every black man, even the one that works for Jesus Christ, or the most elegant executive in a savvy suit, is a member of one of the 6000 tribes on the continent, and he is jealously aware of it.

He derives his identity from the tribe, and some even narrow it down to clans and totems within the tribe. Loyalty is directed towards fellow tribesman, and that is why the continent is literally run on nepotism terms.

When I ran the placement desk for the employment of National Youth Service graduates in Zimbabwe between 2001 and 2004, one of the ministers who hailed from the same province as myself clashed with me on numerous occasions. She would repeatedly remind me that the position I occupied was in essence Masvingo’s turn to employ youths of Karanga descent.

I would not have any of that, and for my troubles I had to endure all sorts of political persecution, threats, ridicule, and at one time I was humiliated at a rally in Gutu district, with the minister telling the crowd that they were looking right in front of them at a “servant of Zezurus” who was so happy to work with “Zezurus” in Harare that he had totally forgotten where he came from, in fact forgotten his tribal identity. The people obliged by questioning what was wrong with me, clearly failing to understand why I could not see in my work position a great opportunity for the Karanga people.

The average African is nurtured into having disregard for the outsider, and outsider refers to someone belonging to another tribe, the way South African goons have been spilling the blood of fellow Africans with ruthless disregard in the recent past.

It is as if there is an invisible tribal mark on the skin of every African, and this is why tribal lines, not national borders, make up the true map of Africa. If tribalists were to have their way, the continent of Africa could easily have 6 000 states based on the tribes on the continent. There are tribalists pushing for a tribal secession in Zimbabwe at the moment, and their argument is in large tribally inclined, with very little substance on developmental merit.

Our leaders perpetuate tribalism in a very shameful way. They pack governments with their tribesman. During Daniel Arap Moi’s reign in Kenya, it almost became official that the Kalenjin identity was part of one’s academic and professional requisites to work in the government; and one Zimbabwean Minister in the eighties reportedly hired more than 40 Karanga district administrators out of about 60 that were manning districts for the entire country.

His brother was head of a tertiary institution in the eastern part of the country, and he reportedly turned the college into a Karanga institution within a very short time. I can take easy shots at the Karanga tribe because I am one of them.

This kind of nepotism is not uncommon across Africa. The people of Burundi have had to put constitutional quotas for government posts and staffing in the military in order to go around the menace of tribal nepotism. For many years a Tutsi government would have only Tustsi personnel in the army, and so would a Hutu government.

We know how disastrous that was, and things have been improving for Burundi since 2005, and one hopes that the political aspirations of the incumbent president will not cost the country the peace we have seen in the last decade.

President Pierre Nkurunziza is seeking a third term election, and his opponents are opposed to him doing more than the two-term limits allowed by the country’s constitution. He has his legal and technical arguments to back his decision, like saying his first term was secured via parliament, and not an election by the public.

Unlike tribes, nations must be inclusive and pluralistic, and this is the direction Africa as a whole must be moving. We must start working towards regional pluralism and inclusivity as a continent.

That is why Muammar Gaddafi’s idea of the United States of Africa must not be allowed to die with the legendary revolutionary. It has to be pursued and developed further, with agreed alterations where necessary.

If the continent is going to develop into a competitive global outfit we must understand the importance of containing large bodies of unrelated denizens around a shared cause.

We need to develop nation states that are governed by complex political and democratic institutions that exist way above tribal identities.

The days of winning political office on the strength of tribal identity must disappear from our political spectrum, and our institutions must frown upon the narrow mindedness of tribal identities.

Our media in Africa must not follow the shameful example from Zimbabwe, where editors with tribal motives freely churn out tribal diatribes disguised as news.

Africa we are one and together we will overcome. It is homeland or death!!

• REASON WAFAWAROVA is a political writer based in SYDNEY, Australia

The truth behind AMH Malema fiasco

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Julius Malema

Julius Malema

Hildegarde The Arena
THIS week’s instalment is a pot-pourri of sorts from the political jungle.
Politics is a dirty game, but so too the mystery that emanates from it. As Neil Armstrong says, “mystery creates wonder and wonder is the basis of man’s desire to understand”. This writer is driven by these elements – mystery, wonder and desire.

Let’s start with mother Africa.

Yesterday, The Herald reported that the much-hyped presentation by South African politician and leader of the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF), Julius Malema, had been called off.

Malema is a former member of the African National Congress Youth League. Sponsored by the Alpha Media Holdings’ “Game Changer” series, he was expected to speak at the Celebration Centre, although some of the full page advertisements in NewsDay for example also give the seminar series venue as the Harare International Conference Centre.

The Malema talk was not coming cheap – a whopping $100 to listen to someone say whatever they wanted to say about the ANC, President Jacob Zuma, Nkandla, xenophobia, black empowerment and their own lives.

This writer knows the nature of some of the seminar series in Zimbabwe: it is free entry. Those who might have started charging are probably asking for a nominal fee. Maybe AMH should borrow a leaf from Dr Ibbo Mandaza’s Sapes Trust because they have been in that business for a very long time.

The months of April and May are very busy for Zimbabweans. We have the school holidays, Independence Day celebrations, May Day celebrations, Harare International Festival of the Arts (Hifa) and the Zimbabwe International Trade Fair (ZITF).

Over and above these, there was the Sadc Extraordinary Summit of Heads of State and Government. This was a full diary, more so when you have to pay $100 to listen to a politician, but did not pay a dime to listen to the Sadc Heads of State and Government.

If the trend has been set in South Africa, it will take a while to be bought in other Sadc countries.

However, it was the newspaper advert that attracted this writer’s attention and in the process created mysteries and wonders.

AMH, publishers of NewsDay, the Zimbabwe Independent and the Standard, have never been known to subscribe to the political ideology that Malema and his EFF are known for – black empowerment.

In South Africa their sister paper is the Mail & Guardian. Therein is the mystery because on February 6, the now defunct Sapa news agency reported that the ANC was accusing the Mail & Guardian “of a rightwing agenda in the way it reports on the ruling party”.

ANC spokesperson Zizi Kodwa remarked: “Because of its rightwing agenda against a democratic and progressive state it has compromised some of the basic journalistic ethics . . . (they) do everything possible to discredit the democratic state. Because of their rightwing political agenda they won’t accept anything official from government or the ANC,” he said.

One reader Pieter @PieterMTB001 tweeted: “ANC accuses M&G of right wing agenda. Smells like a Zimbabwe in the making.”

Another mystery on the advert is that Malema is described as “South Africa’s youngest political power broker coming to Zimbabwe”. Apart from the brief history on his activities in the ANC, there is no mention in the advert on the Economic Economic Freedom Fighters, a political outfit he founded and leads to date, and a political party he was representing. So, if he is a “game changer”, which pedestal is he standing on? If they could print so much red in the advert, why leave out EFF?

There is no denying that Malema has a following even outside of South Africa, but you end up reading between the lines when a media house that has been going to town about Malema and his alleged relationship with Zanu-PF is suddenly his cheerleader.

You also read between the lines when AMH tried to bring Malema over to Zimbabwe, barely a week after the Sadc Extraordinary Summit, which was attended by South African President Jacob Zuma. What is the bigger picture – trying to upstage the South African president and the Sadc leader, President Mugabe?

One would have thought this particular “Game Changer” series would have been taken to Botswana, because it was the regime change agenda in Botswana that got Malema and other members of the ANC Youth League into trouble, eventually leading to their expulsion from the party.

When Britons vote to disunite

The British go to the polls today. Too much democracy brought in all manner of political players. Gone are the days when the electoral field was just for the Conservatives (Tories) and the Labour parties. For those that follow the former coloniser’s 2015 poll, the truth is that they might not have an outright winner, and that it will end up with a hung parliament and a government of national unity, again.

The major problem is that the British want to remain British, although there are signs that the election might disunite the kingdom.

And, that royal baby! How could she decide to come at such a crucial time – five days before the election date? Will Her Royal Highness Princess of Cambridge (Charlotte Elizabeth Diana) be the game changer since all politicians tongue-twisted themselves at the weekend tweeting and congratulating her parents Prince William and Kate Middleton?

This election also proved the old adage: free speech for me and not for thee. Some British newspapers openly endorsed the party of their choice: mainly Tory and/or Labour. This is hypocrisy at its highest level considering that the same media takes issue at Zimbabwe’s public media’s pro-Zanu-PF stance.

When a father wants his daughter to marry

Disagreements, factions and/or party squabbles are not limited to the Zimbabwean political landscape. In fact, there is so much of that now, making it look like there is a rethink of how politics should be played.

In this instance, it is a family and political affair, and one newspaper called it a family nuclear war.

Their political ideology is not admirable, but former leader of France’s far-right Front National party Jean-Marie Le Pen is so angry with his daughter and current party president, Marine Le Pen. So acrimonious are the feelings that the father wants his daughter to marry as soon as possible so that she assumes another name.

A Guardian (UK) report of April 8 states: “In an unprecedented attack on her father that marks her first move to cut him out of the party he founded, Marine Le Pen issued a scathing Press release warning that the 86-year-old would be prevented from standing in regional elections in the south of France.

“Jean-Marie Le Pen seems to have descended into a strategy somewhere between scorched earth and political suicide,” she said. “His status as honorary president does not give him the right to hijack the Front National with vulgar provocations seemingly designed to damage me, but which unfortunately hit the whole movement.”

The father hit back this Tuesday saying he “does not recognise any ties” to Marine who “betrays me in such a scandalous fashion” after being suspended from the party he founded.

The 86-year-old father said on Monday night: “If such moral principles should preside over France, it would be scandalous given my betrayal … I am ashamed that the president of the Front National has my name and I hope she loses it as soon as possible.”

The angry father said: “I was hoping that the president of the National Front would get married as quickly as possible so as to change her name, because I’m ashamed that she has the same surname as me.”

This is stretching party squabbles to the limit. Whatever happened to the commandment: “Honour your father and your mother, so that you may live long …?”

Hillary Clinton: Forever a public figure

When you speak about Hillary Clinton, whose eyes are set on becoming the first United States woman president, you have to always refer to her as “former this”, and “former that”.

Her life in public life dates back to 1979 when she was the First Lady of Arkansas state. That is 36 years ago, and more than the years Zimbabwe has been independent.

From being the Governor’s wife for more than a decade, she became US First Lady in 1993 to 2001. After a stint as First Lady, she became US Senator for New York from 2001 to 2009.

When her bid to the presidency failed in 2008, she was appointed Secretary of State in the Obama administration, and retired in 2013.

Now, the 67-year old “former this” and “former that” is gunning for the big one, and the whole family, granddaughter included are on the campaign trail.

If she clinches the 2016 vote, and serves the first four-year term, it means that she would have been living on tax- payers’ money for 42 years. We acknowledge her work as a private legal practitioner, but the fact remains that the United States cannot tell other countries that their leaders have served for long periods when evidence is there that they are doing the same, in a different manner.

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