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TellZim News mourns Tatenda Shunyai

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The late Tatenda Shunyai

Upenyu Chaota

And I heard a voice from heaven saying, “Write this: Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord from now on. Blessed indeed,” says the Spirit, “that they may rest from their labours for their deeds follow them, Revelations 14 vs 13.
Psalms 116 vs 15 sums it up saying, “Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of his saints.
The festive season saw the death of one of TellZim News’ former interns Tatenda Shunyai who was a 4:1 student at Great Zimbabwe University (GZU) studying Media and Cultural Studies.
Shunyai joined TellZim News for his work related learning from August 2016 to August 2017.
He died on December 27, 2017 in Harare after some health problems emanating from one of his legs which had undergone surgery in the past. He was buried on December 30, 2017 in Mvuma.
TellZim News editor Passmore Kuzipa described the loss of Shunyai as unfortunate, saying the media fraternity was robbed of promising talent.
“Shunyai had a promising future in the media industry and for the time he was with us, he proved his mettle. We are deeply saddened by his death and we hope he will find shelter in the arms of the Lord.
“We had hoped to work with him later on now that he was about to complete his studies but time would not permit. God had other plans for him,” said Kuzipa.
Outside the media, Shunyai was a music lover and was a passionate member of the ZAOGA Mvuma assembly youth choir. He was also a talented performer anchoring the GZU music band which entertains people at such functions as MaDzimbahwe Arts Festival as well as at graduation ceremonies.local

South African Youth and Religious Leaders in Peace Camp

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1. ◆ Summary of the PR ◆

Title: South African Youth and Religious Leaders of
6 Religions Hosted a Peace Camp for Peacebuilding
Date: November 26th, 27th, 2017 
Venue: Brahma Kumaris Meditation Centre, Durban, South Africa
Purpose: To discuss the topic of the role of the religions in achieving peace
Attachment: Immediate Press Release / Photos

6 religious leaders representing Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, African Hebrew, Rastafari, and Brahma Kumaris gathered to discuss the topic of “The role of the religions in achieving peace” in attendance with 50 youth from 26th to 27th of November in Durban, South Africa.

This camp was organized by an international NGO, Heavenly Culture, World Peace, Restoration of Light (HWPL), registered in UN ECOSOC and UN DPI and carried out by 6 religious leaders who have participated in the interfaith dialogue meetings called World Alliance of Religions’ Peace (WARP) Office.

The Religious Youth Peace Camp is a platform to find the cause and solution of the wars and conflicts that occur due to differences in religion and ideology. It is also a place for discussion on the role of the religions in the achievement of peace.

This peace camp in Durban was the first Religious Youth Peace Camp held in the South African region. The participants experienced various religious programs such as presentations on the culture of each religion and group discussions between religious leaders and youth.

Nishaat Siddiqi, Shaykh of Ansari Tariqa, shared the opinion about the possibility of collaboration with peacebuilding with different religions and thoughts saying “People from all walks of life and faith believed in wonders of God and formed one community. It worked before so I believe it(the harmony of all the religions) can work now.”

A volunteer of HWPL said “South Africa has a multi-religion, multi-ethnic society and as such people respect each other, but there needs to be actual peace work. This camp will have served as a reminder of the importance of the role of religious leaders and youth for peace.”

The Religious Youth Peace Camp, a part of HWPL’s peace initiatives, aims to provide a chance to experience interreligious culture based on mutual respect and open dialogue to the youth around the world. Starting with Cambodia this April, it has been held in several countries including India, Lithuania, Myanmar, and the Netherlands.

Masvingo Pirates FC honour players

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Sports, Taurai Madziise, Takunda Mazhambe, Wellington Ncube and Alvin Bhero pose with their certificates at the event

Clever Taperamoyo

Masvingo Pirates Football Club (FC) formerly known as Mucheke Pirates FC ‘Dzinochekwa Baba’ recently rewarded players who excelled during the recently-ended 2017 Zimbabwe Football Association (Zifa) Eastern Region Division One season.
The football club held a speech and awards giving ceremony at Kyle Lake View Holiday Resort near Lake Mutirikwi.
Masvingo Pirates FC administration decided to honour every player with prize money but also awarded a select few with extra prizes for being outstanding in different categories.
Sebastian Tuboyi received US$70 for being the most disciplined player while top goal scorer Wellington Ncube received US$60 in cash.
Taurai Madziise was named most improved player and he walked away with US$60 prize money while Takunda Mazhambe won US$70 for being the most consistent player.
Alvin Bhero got for himself US$50 for being the ‘player’s player’ while Assan Kachepa was given US$100 for being the soccer star of the year.
Zifa Eastern Region administrator Tadius Machawira, who was the guest of honour, encouraged the team to work harder come next season so that the community can have a team in the Premier Soccer League (PSL).
He encouraged players to stay with the team and hone their skills with it rather than migrate endlessly.
“I would like to encourage players to try by all means to stay at one club. That will help you a lot in achieving your goals and mature in football. You will then help the team to be promoted into the premier league,” Machawira said.
Masvingo pirates completed the 2017 season at number four after facing a tough challenge towards the end of the competition.
Team coach Ezekiel Mutoda thanked the players for their performance throughout the season and pledged to work for better performance next season.sport

Young ‘Manyuchi’ emerges in Chivhu

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Kudzanai Zhoya

Elliot Jinjika

CHIVHU – Charles Manyuchi’s The Bees Boxing Club foundation has produced a very promising young boxer, Kudzanai Zhoya, who has been touted as the next big thing following his remarkable exploits in the ring this year.
The 18-year-old Zhoya claimed resounding victories in a number of matches against other equally competitive fighters.
In November, he won gold in the Light Weight category at the City Sports Centre in Harare.
Two weeks ago, the young boxer again displayed great boxing form and scooped silver in the Amateur Boxing Competition held in the capital.
Zhoya’s coach Weston Chinoingira, who is also a member of the coaching staff at the Bees Boxing Club, called upon sponsors to support young talent at local level so that the country can produce more boxing heavyweights.
“We have a lot talent at our disposal but the issue of funding is hindering our progress. We need proper training facilities and many materials for us to be where we really need to be. Zhoya is doing wonders and we are proud of the work that is being done. We desperately need sponsors to develop this potential,” said Chinoingira.
On his part, Zhoya said he was determined to work hard so that more people can begin to notice his capabilities.
“I am very proud of the victories I have so far claimed. I am winning and I want to keep on doing the best; winning more medals and representing Zimbabwe at any big stage on which I can set my feet.
“There are indeed challenges associated with shortage of the necessities needed for game but I am hopeful that the future holds something good for us as a club. All people who are successful did not start with everything they needed,” said Zhoya.sport

BVR: People with disabilities getting a raw deal

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Marble Shangwa                                                              Vengai Kurunzirwa

Moses Ziyambi

The Biometric Voter Registration (BVR) process has been praised by many as the ultimate answer to the country’s perennial electoral problems originating from a discredited voters’ role which was being used all along.
While the BVR as a system is good, people with disabilities have criticised the process of its implementation saying it is not friendly to them.
Complaints raised by people with disabilities or organisations that represent their interests include lack of mechanisms that support the easy registration of those, for example, who are blind as well as those who are speech impaired.
Attempts to get exact figures of people with disabilities who have managed to register as voters so far were unsuccessful with the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (Zec) chief inspector Jane Chigidji saying she was not at liberty to comment because the elections body was still collating and uploading the data.
It is however understood that the number of people with disabilities who have registered in the ongoing exercise is far below the national average of any other demographic group.
When one goes to the registration centre, he/she is given a VR1 form to fill personal information about themselves. The form has a section that allows people with disabilities to state the nature of their disability.
That, sources in Zec say, will enable the electoral body to meet the special needs of people with disabilities on election day for example by providing adjustable voting booths that are convenient to those who use wheelchairs.
Biometrics also allows amputees who have lost both their arms in accidents or who are born with such disabilities to register to vote because the system is not dependent on fingerprints alone, but on photographs and other exterior biological features of a person too.
Lincoln Matongo, a Sign Language teacher at Morgan Zintec Collage in Harare said he did not have many problems registering to vote because he can lip-read.
Lip-reading is a technique of understanding speech by visually interpreting the movements of the lips, face and tongue when normal sound is not available or cannot be heard.
“I am quite fortunate because I can lip-read so I did not face any challenges when I went to register to vote but there are others who are in a less fortunate situation such that they find the registration process cumbersome and not friendly to them,” said Matongo.
He said his own wife had not yet registered to vote because she feared that the personnel manning the registration centres will not be able to understand her.
“She cannot lip-read so she is afraid she will face communication challenges if she goes to register to vote. I understand those who do the registration process are either scantily equipped or not equipped at all to deal with people with speech and hearing difficulties. Most people in our country cannot use Sign Language,” said Matongo.
Tapiwa Tsikai, an activist who advocates for the rights of people with disabilities, said BVR is not fully accessible to people with disabilities and much still needed to be done to ensure that an important section of the population is not left behind.
“The BVR, like others other systems and processes in our society, perpetuates the existing flaws we have in our country because not all centres have ramps and wide doors to improve their accessibility to people using wheelchairs, crutches and others.
“All systems and processes in the country are never designed with people with disabilities in mind. In most cases, issues of disabilities are only given secondary thoughts and they never form the basis of any initial planning process.
“It is also difficult for people to communicate because most of the people doing the registration work do not understand Sign Language. How then can we possibly say BVR is friendly to us? Very few people with disabilities have managed to register and my worry is that these citizens, who form 15 percent of the population, are being let down in this critical exercise,” said Tsikai.
He also criticised authorities for not printing material on BVR in Braille, saying many potential registrants are being left out because voter education information is accessible mostly to people who can see printed text.
This was echoed by Masvingo provincial youth spokesperson for the National Council for the Disabled Persons in Zimbabwe Vengai Kurunzirwa who said lack of information in Braille was perhaps the biggest error of omission on the part of Zec.
“We held a meeting with local Zec officials and members of our community raised a number of issues including the prohibitive distances that some of our people have to travel to get to the registration centres. Many people said they would prefer mobile registration booths serving people in all residential areas.
“It was, however, the issue of the lack of Braille reading material that disappointed may people. As you may know, the voting cycle is incomplete without adequate voter education and what it means is that the visually-impaired people are getting a raw deal,” said Kurunzirwa.
He also said complaints about the lack of Sign Language capacity at registration centres continue to recur although Zec promised to engage the Henry Murray School for the Deaf at Morgenster Mission to help ease communication challenges between registration officials and speech-impaired prospective registrants.
Others complained that although Zec was heavily investing in its information and publicity drive on TV, no advert specially designed for people with disabilities by people with disabilities had ever been seen on national television.
Zec is understood to be planning to flight the first TV advert on BVR for people with disabilities thanks to sustained lobbying from such civic groups as Deaf Zimbabwe Trust (DZT).
Marble Shangwa, another disability activist based in Masvingo said she was concerned with the ease or lack thereof with which people with disabilities are able to register to vote.
She said she was particularly worried about deaf people who have not had the opportunity to learn Sign Language because theirs is probably the most difficult position.
“People tend to believe that when you have somebody who is proficient in Sign Language, then all the problems of every deaf person has disappeared. That is a misconception because we also have illiterate deaf people; those who have not had a chance to study Sign language.
“Theirs is a predicament we would like the government to pay special attention to by making sure that all deaf children are taught the language so that they don’t suffer a double disadvantage. Being born deaf puts a child at a disadvantage and being denied the chance to learn because of poverty or lack of facilities increases the problem since there would no longer be any formal language of communication with whoever the child meets even later in life as an adult who should enjoy his/her rights like everybody else. There are indeed schools that teach children with those challenges but they are few and expensive,” said Shangwa.
Her opinion comes after some reports that Zec is finding it extra-ordinarily hard to help such people register to vote even when Sign Language experts are available.
“That is a big challenge for us. There are some voluntary organisations that are seconding their personnel to come and improve communication between deaf people who want to register and our own registration officials. The problem comes when you have those who can neither write nor use Sign Language. We have encountered many situations of that nature and, unfortunately, many of the prospective registrants were not successful,” said one Zec official who preferred not to be named.local

Zimuto ZRP sergeant’s wife up for fraud

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Nyasha Marumbi

MASVINGO – Hilda Kandemire, who is wife to a police sergeant at Zimuto Camp, was on Monday brought before magistrate Peter Madiba facing fraud charges of duping Tichaona Zimunya of US$450 and Miriam Mhlanga of 80 chickens and vegetables worth US$486 on the same day.
Kandemire was asked to restitute both parties by January 31, 2018 or face 90 days imprisonment.
It was the State’s case that on January 27, 2017, Kandemire approached Zimunya, who resides at 20466 Bandwe Street, Rujeko and told him that she was selling tomatoes.
She was given US$300 and 50 empty creates of tomatoes.
On the same day, the accused demanded a top up of US$450 so that she could buy the tomatoes that Zimunya had requested and ran away.
The complainant checked on the accused person several times and he only received US$120 through EcoCash.
Kandemire allegedly gave US$180 to Mike Muduma to give to Zimunya before going away to an unknown destination.
Zimunya later recovered his empty crates at Zimuto camp.
On the very same day, Kandemire approached Mhlanga and advised her that she had found a buyer for her 80 chickens and six vegetables at Continental Restaurant.
They both went to Continental Restaurant to deliver the chickens and vegetables to the said buyer Celine Debock.
They however failed to locate Debock and the accused persuaded Mhlanga to leave the chickens in her custody waiting for the buyer.
She later diverted from the original plan and sold the chickens and vegetables to an unknown buyer.
The matter came to light when the Mhlanga approached Debock for payment only to be told that Kandemire did not sell the chickens to her.
Investigations were made leading to the arrest of Kandemire who had recently returned home.
Polite Chikiwa represented the State.local

Churches join Mnangagwa bootlicking club

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President Emmerson Mnangagwa

…call him Biblical Joseph

Upenyu Chaota

MASVINGO – Even though President Emmerson Mnangagwa has openly urged people to guard against bootlicking him, some Christian denominations under the Faith for the Nation Campaign banner given him a new name Joseph, purportedly to capture the trials and tribulations that the Biblical Joseph son of Jacob endured before he became the only hope for his tribesmen.
During a welcome luncheon for the new Masvingo Provincial Affairs minister Josaya Hungwe organised by the grouping at Flamboyant Hotel, Apostle Andrew Wutaunashe of the Family of God Church hero-worshipped Mnangagwa and equated him to the Biblical Joseph.
Wutaunashe said Mnangagwa and Joseph in the Bible share the same story as both were once vilified but later became saviours.
His message comes after another bootlicking orgy by Destiny for Africa Network founder Obadiah Musindo who said Mnangagwa was ‘God-appointed’ and said those who oppose him are wasting their time.
“We would like to add another name for the President. He should be called Emmerson Dambudzo Joseph Mnangagwa. He has come to save the country from the dangerous course it had taken.
“As the church, we urge all progressive Zimbabweans and opposition parties to work together in re-building the country under the leadership of President Mnangagwa. He needs our full support,” said Apostle Wutaunashe.
He send a message to the Western countries whom he said should lift any form of sanctions imposed on Zimbabwe so that it can move forward.
“We plead with the West to remove any form of sanctions they have on us so that we can develop. Zimbabwe can solve its own problems internally as was shown with the recent events. We do not need the West to set the pace for us and we want to tell the President that the church is fully behind him,” said Apostle Wutaunashe.
Hungwe, who was the guest of honour, said he will take the church’s message to the President.
“I will go with the message to the President and tell him that the people have faith in your leadership,” said Hungwe.politics

Bikita RDC holds long serving awards

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Bikita RDC chairperson Clara Makura (in gown) poses for a picture with councillors and staff after the prize giving ceremony

TellZim Reporter

NYIKA – “People need to be appreciated for the hard work and commitment they give to the organisation.”
These were the words of Bikita Rural District Council (RDC) chief executive officer (CEO) Peter Chibi during a long serving awards ceremony held at council offices last week in honour of staff members who served between 15 and 30 years.
Councillors who served two consecutive terms were also given a token of appreciation. Councillor Makuvaza of Ward 5 was named the longest serving councillor, having consistently held onto his position since 1980.
“Today we are honouring people who have been with us for more than 15 years and we are happy with the work and dedication given. Some have given about 30 years to the council and this needs to be appreciated,” said Chibi.
Chibi said due to financial constraints, they have not been able to go out of their way to get fancy gifts for the long-serving staff but only managed to buy suits for them.
“A suit is a symbol of respect and we say thank you to those who have dedicated their lives to make Bikita the place to be in as far as service delivery and ease of doing business is concerned,” said Chibi.
Councillors who served two consecutive terms also got suits while every member of staff will be treated to a special Christmas present of about 5 kg of game meat.local

Mwenezi farmers’ auction Command fertiliser

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Cephas Shava

MWENEZI – Some A1 farmers in Mufula area under Chief Chitanga in Ward 13 are reportedly selling inputs they received under the Command Agriculture programme, TellZim News has learnt.
Sources said buyers from all over the district and elsewhere were flocking to the area to grab the fertiliser that is reportedly going for a song.
“Farmers were given fertilisers and cotton seeds to plant under the Command Agriculture scheme. Due to desperation, farmers are only planting the cotton seeds and selling the fertilisers that must be used to nurture the crop. Some are even selling a 50 kg bag of fertiliser for US$6. This has attracted a lot of prospective buyers,” said a source.
TellZim News has also learnt that some buyers were recently intercepted by Mwenezi police detectives and the culprits were due to appear in court by the time of going to print.
It is illegal to use inputs obtained through the programme for any other purposes other than what they are meant for.
Ward 13 councillor Takura Mudavose confirmed having received reports that people were abusing the inputs and said he will continue to tell people not to sell the inputs.
“I have heard reports that some farmers are selling the fertiliser to third parties and that is totally unacceptable. I will have to do my own investigation to establish if that is true.
“I will also embark on a sensitisation programme to warn farmers that they will face the full wrath of the law if they engage in such actions,” said Mudavose.
Many people have already been prosecuted across the country for offenses involving the theft and/or abuse of Command Agriculture inputs.local

Zim youths launches TV show in SA

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Admire Makarichi

Elliot Jinjika

CHIVHU – Two young Zimbabweans in South Africa, Admire Makarichi (22) and Andrew Tsuro (21), are set to launch a television show in Kempton Park, Johannesburg.
The show, which will be called The Entrepreneurship Hub, will have a 24 hour online service and is a brainchild of the two young men who are all motivational speakers.
Makarich is also an author and entrepreneur who is eager to spread whatever knowledge he has and he shares with Tsuro the goal of connecting aspiring entrepreneurs around the globe.
“The core vision of this initiative is to lead a reliable and value-adding entrepreneurship forum where we connect aspiring business people while expanding start-ups horizons with expert guidance and mentorship from industry leaders,” said Makarichi.
The television show is set to start programming its first episode on January 27 and it will host an online 24 hour service where people outside South Africa can follow or access it through liking their Facebook page @ehubco.
“Our first episode will be on January 27, 2018 and will be streamed online. We urge people around the globe to tune in and have a taste of this well-informed television business programme from where entrepreneurs will gain valuable information,” said Makarichi.
Makarichi has published a motivational book called Success by Association by which he highlights vision and persistence as the key ingredients of success.local