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Day 16: #Lockdown Picture Gallery

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With a steady increase in the national tally of confirmed Covid-19 positive cases, more people seem to be taking the social distancing rules a bit more seriously. This is evidence by increased awareness on the need for people to avoid handshakes and squeezing. The were more orderly queues at some business centres in Masvingo but five police officers were seen beating up some people found loitering at Rujeko B shopping centre this evening. There was a visible decrease in the number people on the streets of many parts of Senga and Mkoba in Gweru, although big shops in town were teeming with people in the morning. Piarates taxes continued to dodgy police roadblocks in Zvishavane by using new pick-up and droup-off  points. In Rutenga, police maintained a heavier presence than yesterday and this resulted in a quieter environent before 13:00 hrs. In Chiredzi, police took awareness campaign to the street, urging people to avoid uneccessary movements. Very few people were at bus stations waiting for Zupco buses and kombis.

Birchenough Bridge

Birchenough Bridge

Birchenough Bridge

Chiredzi

Chiredzi

Chiredzi

Masvingo

Masvingio

Chitima markert, Masvingo

Just hang on: The good old days will be back

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Dr Jeofrey Mtemeri
The COVID-19 pandemic has
brought along with it uncertainties among many people across the whole world. The
uncertainties include worries on the unpredictability of what the future holds
in terms of employment, financial stability, children’s education and business.
Meaninglessness and despair hoover around the entirety of the universe. So many
people would be in financial dire straits caused by COVID 19 induced shut downs
of both formal and informal businesses.
Many businesses, for instance, would experience
huge losses. Imagine a farmer whose cash crop was ready for harvest and ready
for the market and all of a sudden, he/she realises that he/she can’t reach out
to customers because of the lockdown. Twenty one days are a long period to wait
for such farmers. Needless to say, people are busy counting the losses. Despite
all these challenges, let us remain positive and proceed to plan B to minimise
the losses. Don’t lose hope. Some vegetables, for instance, can be dried and
sold later. This can salvage the situation to some extent. An old adage says
half a loaf is better than nothing.
People are free agents as
espoused by the existentialists. They are free to make choices that define
their lives. They are rational beings even in times of plagues and pandemics.
Your future lies entirely in your hands.  Make do with what surrounds you and make the
best out of the lockdown time. Try to think outside the box. You can start on a
project whilst you are in such kind of detentions. Think of Nelson Mandela and
many other freedom fighters who were in prison for a long period of time.
Instead of doing nothing and mourning about their detention, they started
writing books or further their education. These acts show the invincibility of
hope even in the most trying times of people’s lives. In other words, instead
of folding hands and counting the losses, people should be motivated by the
fact that they are the masters of their destiny. This is an existential
philosophy that people can make meaningful choices even in the middle of
uncertainties. Make the best out of your helplessness and hopelessness. For
example those with machines such as computers, sewing machines, welding
machines and other gadgets can make use of the time as the sun will rise and
shine again.
Most people have no time
to be with their families as they are always busy trying to make ends meet.
This is unfortunate because, according to Denise Witmer, spending time together
is one of the greatest gifts families can give to one another. Research has also
proven that strong family bonds encourage good behaviour in children, improve
academic performance and strengthen family coherence. Thus, if you have had
little time with your family, take the lockdown as a time to create or recreate
a formidable bond with your family. Learn from your spouse or children. Your
family is important as they are the ones who are at your disposal to give you
counsel that you require to get rid of depression, stress, anxiety and other disorders
that can be caused by the lockdown. This might also be the time you and your
children are together this long. Be the role model that you can possibly be.
Children learn through experiences and modelling from their immediate environment.
In other words, children learn vicariously from those they value the most. Sit
together as a family, possibly around the dinner table and eat as a family.
Cell phones and other electrical gadgets like televisions must be switched off.
You don’t want to divide the family attention. This will strengthen the family
bond and family cohesiveness.
Be patient as the heyday will
be back. Remember this is not the first pandemic that has affected the world. As
far back as 430BC, there was The Plague of Athens which lasted about five years
and killed over 100 000 people. The black death from 1346-1353. This pandemic
wiped over half of Europe’s population. Mass graves were the solution to the
overwhelming death and burial of the dead caused by the pandemic. The London
plague around 1665 killed over 100 000 people. The 2009 influenza pandemic which
was caused by H1N1 virus killed over 100 000 people. All of these are now
history so shall be COVID-19, it will pass. So let’s not be devastated by this
as it will also pass just like other past pandemics.
Some people have already
lost or shall lose their loved ones due to the coronavirus. The grief that
shall be caused by this pandemic may be unbearable. Such people need to be
assisted so that they cope with heartbreaks. Countries such as Spain, Italy,
France and Britain who have so far lost many lives due to COVID-19 need to be
assisted during their time of mourning. People are buried in mass graves and sometimes
in the absence of their relatives. This has a ripple and devastating effect on
the surviving members of the family. Their grieving would be a combination of
anger and confusion. Absence of funeral rituals may be catastrophic in a way.
According to Michelle Drouin, funeral rituals are important parts of grieving
where people are reconciled with the deceased.
In Africa and other parts
of the world, veneration of the dead is very important. Sacrifices and prayers
are done to appease the dead. The absence of such ceremonies may   create
a void between the dead and the living hence, people may dwell in mourning
longer than expected. There is still an attachment between the dead and the
living. Both African traditional religion and Christianity have some common
understanding of the dead such as dressing the dead, body viewing, visiting the
graves early in the morning and sometimes holding ceremonies after some time. These
ceremonies are part of mourning. If all these are not done it creates a void
that would require psychotherapy. Counselling centres need to be created to
help those who did not mourn their loved ones properly. Churches must come in
as support groups to help the nations in mourning. There is always a life even
after the death of the most loved ones.
The outbreak of COVID-19
should be taken as a wakeup call for nations to prepare for such eventualities in
future. So many nations were found with their pants down with very little
resources to fight the disease. Health facilities were not in good shape
despite having some infrastructure in place.
 There is always light at the end of every
tunnel. Being exposed to such dreadful scenarios should help us prepare for the
future. Let us remain vigilant and positive in anticipation of the brighter
future.  With time, the wounds will
always heal. The businesses that we would have lost during the lockdown will
slowly pick up and perhaps thrive or improve because of the timeout that was
made possible by the shutdown.
People’s way of life was
severely affected as they did not have enough food to sustain them during the 3
week long lockdown. Families may have been divided as a result of
misunderstandings that were caused by shortages. Healing of such families may
be necessary after the COVID-19 pandemic. Government, private sector, churches
and all concerned individuals should put resources together to give
psychosocial support and psychoeducation to all the affected.
The COVID-19 impact, so
far, is not as devastating as in other countries such as Italy and Spain. However,
people must continue to observe preventive methods beyond the shutdown. Such
pandemics do not just disappear all of a sudden but will slowly disappear in
the fullness of time. Bathing, washing of hands, use of detergents, maintaining
social distance and avoiding shaking of hands must be maintained for some time.
Let us be positive and wait in anticipation of the brighter future. Every dark
cloud has a silver lining and reports of containment of the pandemic in China
and signs of the slowing rates of infection and deaths in worst hit countries
such as Italy and Spain are encouraging.
Jeofrey Mtemeri (PhD)
Department of Psychology
Great Zimbabwe University (GZU)

Am I dull? Police boss intimidates TellZim

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Ass Com Nyazema



…I will bring my certificates, I want you to give me a new job

TellZim Reporter

MASVINGO
– In what could be considered to be an act of overzealousness, Zimbabwe
Republic Police (ZRP) Officer Commanding Masvingo Province, Ass Com Taoneyi
Nyezama yesterday (April 11) threatened and intimidated TellZim directors
Passmore Kuzipa and Golden Maunganidze over a published story.
The
senior police officer then kicked the two out of his office, and they approached
Media Institute of Southern Africa (Misa) Zimbabwe lawyer Derrick Charamba of
Hwacha and Ndlovu.
Nyazema,
however, later refused to speak to the duo and their lawyer, as he was angry
for being named in a Muckraker column called Mapombi Adonha.
The
column gave a critical and satirical overview of provincial law enforcement
authorities’ policing of the national lockdown.
“Am
I dull? Who wrote that column? I will bring my certificates to TellZim so that
you can give me a job. Give me your full names and get out of my offices,”
fumed Nyazema.
Kuzipa
said the intimidation was so serious that they had to immediately engage a
lawyer.
“We
did not take the intimidation lightly. Nyazema occupies the highest police office
in the province. He is, therefore, capable of doing anything.  However, refusing to talk to our lawyer even
scared us more, and we are living in fear because we do not know his next move.
“His
insinuations that he wants us to give him a job were not sincere and we take
such ominous threats to our security seriously,” said Kuzipa.
Maunganidze
later spoke to national police spokesperson, Snr Ass Com Paul Nyathi who
advised that TellZim should approach Commissioner General Godwin Matanga with
the matter since Nyazema had refused to meet their lawyer.
“We
strongly felt we were being threatened. We had to engage police spokesperson
Ass Com Nyathi after the provincial police boss refused to talk to our
lawyer. 
“Journalism
is not a crime. There are so many ways of seeking redress when one is not happy
with a story. One can approach the Voluntary Media Council of Zimbabwe (VMCZ)
or the Zimbabwe Media Commission (ZMC), but harassment and intimidation is
unacceptable,” said Maunganidze. 
Misa
Zimbabwe has since issued a statement condemning Nyazema’s actions saying the
media should be allowed to do its work without threats and intimidations.
“Misa Zimbabwe condemns the
intimidation of journalists in the course of their professional duties.
Aggrieved parties are urged to file their complaints with the 
Voluntary Media Council
of Zimbabwe
 instead of taking the law into their own hands. The
Zimbabwe Media Commission is also available as a constitutional body if there
are sections of the society that feel aggrieved.
“It is
of high concern in this case that the police refused to meet with an officer of
the court who was representing the two journalists. We can only hope that the
journalists or their media house are not going to be harassed given the
behaviour exhibited by the Masvingo Police Assistant Commissioner,” reads the
statement.
Charamba
also said he will notify the lawyers’ association about what he regarded as
deplorable behaviour exhibited by the police boss.
“We
are all officers of the law so I did not expect that from somebody of Nyazema’s
social and professional standing. I wanted to engage him because my clients
felt threatened by his statements but he refused. I am raising the issue with
the lawyers’ association,” said Charamba.

Day 15: #Lockdown Picture Gallery

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A Gweru City Council tractor was sported disinfecting the streets in town. Many makeshift vegetable market stall were seen in some suburbs of Chiredzi as people try to find the means to survive the lockdown trade restrictions. Many people gathered at Birchenough Bridge Primary School for a Social Welfare food distribution programme. Some money changers were doing business in Mpandawana and in Rutenga today albeit not in the usual brazen manner. Police, however, maintained a heavy presence at Maranda business centre.

Mpandawana

Mpandawana

Rivercome Service Station, Chiredzi

Chiredzi

Chiredzi

Social Welfare food distribution at Birchenough Bridge Primary School

Birchenough Bridge Primary School

Birchenough Bridge Primary School

Rutenga

Rutenga

Rutenga

Gweru

Gweru

Chibi Turn Off, a potential coronavirus hotspot

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Chivi Road

….Chivi District Hospital has 12 gloves, 15 masks


TellZim Reporter

The many cross-border truck
drivers that stop at Chibi Turn Off business centre to rest and pick up sex
workers are aggravating the district’s vulnerability to the dreaded coronavirus, a legislator has warned.
Chivi Central Member of Parliament
(MP) Ephraem Gwanongodza made the remarks while making a contribution during a
recent visit to Masvingo by members of the national Covid-19 taskforce led by
Mines and Mining Development minister Winston Chitando.
“Businesses there might be closed
for much of the day, but truck drivers from South Africa still
park there in their numbers. In the surrounding villages are women who like to
entertain the truck drivers, and the contact that happens makes all social distancing
impossible. I have discussed it with the local councillor and it is our request
that trucks should be banned from parking there because it’s putting our
district at serious risk,” said Gwanongodza.
Speaking at the same gathering,
Chivi South Member of Parliament Killer Zivhu lamented the lack of equipment at
Chivi District Hospital.
“Front-line staff at the hospital
is exposed because there is no sufficient personal protective equipment. They
only have 12 gloves and less than 15 masks and that makes the hospital
unprepared to handle a serious outbreak,” said Zivhu.
In his presentation, the Minister
of State for Masvingo Provincial Affairs Ezra Chadzamira, who leads the
taskforce at provincial level, said there was in excess of $12 million donated
by Tongaat Hulett, Byword Motors and Bikita Minerals being used to equip
identified health centres in the province.
Chivi District Hospital, which
has set up an isolation centre with a capacity of 16 patients, is beset with
many problems including old facilities and erratic water supplies.

Covid-19 hunger: Zimbos in SA beg to come back home

Cephas Shava

MWENEZI
A group of Zimbabweans resident in the South African Town of George in the
Western Cape province are desperately looking for help to be repatriated back
home, saying their host country’s extension of the lockdown was driving them to
the brink of starvation.
On
April 09, South African President Cyril Ramaphosa announced an extension of the
lockdown by a further two weeks until the end of April.
This
has translated to enormous economic difficulty for citizen and foreigner alike,
with the situation even direr for foreigners who live hand to mouth on a daily
basis, with no job security and social security protection.
“Here
in George, the people I know who desperately need to go home add up to 24. We had
convinced ourselves that we could manage for 21 days but the extension has
turned everything upside down. If we remain stuck, here we are definitely going
to die of hunger. It’s better for this situation to prevail while we are in our
home country.
“We
went to seek help at Thembalethu Police Station but they laughed us away and
mocked us. We had expected them to help us get travelling passes so we could
travel back to Zimbabwe.
“On
many occasions, we called the Zimbabwean consulate in Cape Town but nobody
picked the calls,” said Respect Majoni who contacted TellZim on behalf of his
group.
He
said the group consisted of people from Mwenezi, Mhondoro and Beatrice.
“The
little food that we have is fast running out and we don’t see how we will be
able to survive this lockdown. We need to come back home; we are a humanitarian
case. Our government should help us,” said Majoni.
South
Africa, which is the hardest hit country in Africa, has implemented one of the
toughest lockdown regime in the world, with blanket bans almost all travel.
There
is also a strict alcohol and cigarette sales ban.
  
  

Day 14: #Lockdown Picture Gallery

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Bikita district was sombre today following reports that a combined army and police operation yesterday beat up people at a grinding meal in Nehanda along the road to Mutare. The grinding meal attendent had reportedly continued working long after the stipulated 13:00 hrs closing time. The operation is said to have again moved to break-up a beer-fueled social gathering in a nearby village. There was less police visibility in some places of Mwenezi but businesses at Maranda business centre and Rutenga growth point closed earlier than expected. Vehicular traffic getting into Masvingo town from the suburbs was well-managed, with much of it being filtered early along the way. Many people, however, queued to get into shops at Majange business centre. Being a Sunday, Zvishavane was quieter than yesterday, and so was Mpandawana. Some churches have communicated that they will be conducting all their Easter services online.

Majange business centre, Masvingo

Majange business centre, Masvingo

A church in Masvingo

A church in Masvingo

Victoria Ranch, Masvingo

Chiredzi

Chiredzi

Rutenga, Mwenezi

Rujeko, Masvingo

Day 13: #Lockdown Picture Gallery

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Police officers and soldiers in Mpandawana, Gutu district, were today warning shoppers to buy whatever they needed to buy and quickly get back home. This sent a new message of seriousness of efforts to enforce the lockdown. The case was, however, different in Mutare were money changers conducted their business freely at some shopping centres in the city. In Masvingo, police set up another roadblock at Masvingo Polytechnic following suggestions yesterday that traffic ought to be filtered earlier along the way to avoid unnecessary congestion at Crafts Centre. There were, however, long queues at Majange shopping centre where people sought mealie-meal and other commodities. There was a near mealie-meal stampede in Rutenga, Mwenezi at N & R Wholesale where the New Rutenga Police Post Officer-in-Charge nearly exchanged blows with desperate shoopers. Chiredzi was largely quiet today following a serious police operation to discourage people from leaving their homes.

Majange shopping centre

Majange shopping centre
Majange shopping centre

Majange shopping centre

Mpandawana, Gutu

Mpandawana, Gutu

Chiredzi

Chiredzi

Chiredzi

Rutenga, Mwenezi

Birchenough Bridge

Birchenough Bridge

Mutare

Mutare

Mutare

Day 12: #Lockdown Picture Gallery

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Gweru City Council and Ministry of Health and Child Care have teamed up to set up probably the most ridiculous isolation facility in the country; a tunnel tent which was unveiled in Ascot today. The police were, however, more visible in the Midlands capital to enforce the lockdown. The same applies for Zvishavane where money changers were less visible than yesterday. Many shops in Mwenezi struggled to enforce the social distancing rules as people squezzed each other at every turn. In Chiredzi, many people came out to do their shopping ostensibly in preparation for the Easter holidays. Others said they wanted to buy as much goods as they could, fearing that South Africa’s extension of its own lockdown will result in shortages locally. Parents seemed unable to control their children who played freely along Lion Drive. Most shops in Mutare surbubs have astronomically raised the prices of basic consumer goods. In Chipinge, soldiers and police officers were turning back almost everyone who was trying to get into town.
Ascot isolation centre, Gweru
Gweru
Chiredzi
A mealie-meal queue at Sisk business centre, Masvingo Urban

Mealie-meal queue at Sisk business centre

Inside a shop at Rujeko B shopping centre, Masvingo Urban

Chiredzi

Inside a shop at Rutenga growth point, Mwenezi

Mucheke Old People’s Home

Sisk business centre

Sisk business centre

Lockdown trade restrictions: Rural businesses allege corruption

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Neshuro growth point, Mwenezi

TellZim Reporter

MASVINGO
Some
business people at Nyika growth point have complained that they are being
unfairly disadvantaged by the District Covid-19 Taskforce which they accuse of
abusing the national lockdown order to allow only a select few shops to
operate.
“They are moving around
ordering everybody else to close except a few shops that were selected in a corrupt
manner. There is confusion and ignorance as to who the lockdown order exempts
as well as the terms and conditions, and we are being taken advantage of,” said
one business person.
Another shop owner said
a vehicle recently drove around the whole growth point threatening smaller
businesses with severe consequences if they did not close immediately.
“They drove around
using a hailer mounted on a pick-up truck. We were made to close early in the
morning when we had just opened for the business of the day. We all pay tax and
rates, and we employ people so we don’t understand why somebody could
arbitrarily handpick those who are allowed to operate. They must rather put us
in groups and allocate us alternating trading days,” said the business person.
In a stamped letter
dated April 07, the taskforce makes it clear that only Chingwanga, N.Richards,
Major Family Savings (MFS), Mutema, Bilcro Groceries and Flexi Mart are allowed
to open.
The committee is largely
made up of the District Development Coordinator (DDC)’s office, Bikita RDC, health
authorities and the security services sector.
When contacted for
comment, Bikita RDC CEO Peter Chibhi said it was the taskforce’s duty to do all
that it deemed necessary to reduce the spread of Covid-19.
“If we open all
groceries shops in the growth point, it will be congested yet we need to
decongest it. The problem is that our community has not experienced a single
case or death due to Covid-19. If we are to have a full-blown outbreak, then
everybody will voluntarily shut down their shops,” said Chibhi.
When asked about
complaints about the alleged corruption and unfairness involved in
cherry-picking those that are allowed to operate and those that are forbidden,
Chibhi said the arrangement was a result of a decision by the taskforce.
“That is the
responsibility of the taskforce to direct. 
If we allow all shops to open then there will be chaos in the growth point.
The media would then say, people are not observing the lockdown order,” he
said.
Some business ownersin
Zaka and Mwenezi complained that they too were in a similar predicament, and
they no longer bothered opening their shops since the stipulated timeframes
keep on changing, to the delight of corrupt police officers who use the
uncertainty to elicit for bribes.
Shops were initially allowed
to trade between 09:00hrs and 15:00hrs, but the trading hours were later
changed to between 09:00hrs and 13:00hrs. Many big grocers have, however, have
since reverted to trading between 09:00hrs and 15:00hrs.
The Public Health
(Covid-19 Prevention, Containment and Treatment) (National Lockdown) Order,
2020 commonly referred to as Statutory Instrument 83 of 2020 was gazetted on
March 28, 2020.
The instrument lays
down the lockdown rules valid for a period of 21 days from March 30 – April 19,
2020.
Businesses offering
what are defined as essential services are allowed to operate within stipulated
timeframes and these include shops selling basic commodities, health services providers
as well as those offering electricity and water services.