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Mnangagwa going nowhere

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. . . fire him and you will perish
. . . reign in cunning Grace, Mugabe told

Upenyu Chaota

President Robert Mugabe is in catch 22-situation ahead of the extra-ordinary congress in December as he is struggling to decisively deal with the ever increasing tension between his wife Grace and Vice President Emmerson Mnangagwa ahead of the 2018 general elections.
Immense pressure from Zanu PF youth and women leagues who are pushing for constitutional amendments to elevate a woman into the presidium is mounting, a situation which analysts say is targeted at demoting Mnangagwa.
Political analyst Dr Takavafira Zhou said though Mnangagwa’s rivals from Generation 40 (G40) are pushing for his ouster at the extra-ordinary congress slated for December, it was unlikely that the VP will be fired as that would spell doom for Mugabe and his party come 2018.
“It is clear that Mugabe is desperate to please his cunning wife Grace but the truth is that Mnangagwa is not going anywhere. I think a sober analysis would be to say Mugabe needs Mnangagwa now more than ever,” said Dr Zhou.
“He cannot afford to break ranks with him with an election around the corner; dismissing Mnangagwa will be like shooting himself in the leg. Zanu PF will definitely perish without Mnangagwa,” he added.
Zanu PF deputy secretary for legal affairs, Paul Mangwana was also quoted in the media sharing the same sentiments that Mnangagwa will not be demoted at the extra-ordinary congress.
“Those who are pushing for the removal of Mnangagwa are small boys; we are a very mature party. The party has been there since 1963 and as a party, we deal with real matters not individuals,” Mangwana is quoted as saying.
As the stage has already been set for Zanu PF December congress, Mugabe – analysts say – is caught between a rock and a hard place as he seeks to please his belligerent wife Grace who is believed to be eying the Vice Presidency if the party’s constitution is amended.
All the ten provinces have already given a nod to host an extra-ordinary congress which many believe is aimed at kicking out Mnangagwa.
Masvingo, which Mnangagwa recently claimed was a sovereign province, also endorsed Mugabe to call for an extra-ordinary congress but refused to have the party’s constitution amended to create a women’s quota.
“If Mugabe fires Mnangagwa, the ruling party would definitely lose votes in Masvingo and Midlands. These two provinces constitute the majority of the voters in the country and Mugabe is well aware of that – I’m sure he will not take the risk of firing Mnangagwa at this moment in time,” said Dr Zhou.
“The biggest challenge he faces is his wife who thinks that power is sexually-transmitted. Even if they are to amend the constitution, Mugabe is likely to appoint a third deputy but not Grace because she is the least qualified person.
“There are other women in Zanu PF who are better qualified to be Vice Presidents among them Oppah Muchinguri and president of the Senate Edna Madzongwe. Grace is a liability to national politics but there are other politically-mad people in Zanu PF who think she will be Mugabe’s deputy,” he added.
Midlands-based analyst Timothy Mukahlera said love has already been lost between Mugabe and Mnangagwa but they will not part ways for strategic reasons.
“Mugabe has to tread carefully coming to the congress because he may sink the Zanu PF ship for good. They do not like him (Mnangagwa) but they need him to boost the election.
“They have rocked the boat so much that they fear firing Mnangagwa will create more problems than they are trying to solve right now. If they are to fire him, it will be well after the elections,” said Mukahlera.
However, other analysts like Dr Mabweazara Mugodzwa believe that Mnangagwa is in his last days as President Mugabe’s deputy.
“There is no doubt that Mnangagwa’s enemies will come at him with all they got and he will be fired. They have waited for Grace to mature as the Women’s League boss and now she is ready for her next step.
“G40 fears Mnangagwa so much that they cannot afford to leave him with any powerful post because he will turn against them. Masvingo and Midlands provinces will try to save him but they are a minority.
“They want to use the women’s quota as a pretext to execute a plan they have been hatching for a very long time. Mugabe is being advised by people who want to destroy him so at this point, he can do anything,” said Dr Mugodzwa.top news

ZISMIWU wins wage dispute arbitration case

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Rtd Major Faster Gono

…Gono urges workers to defend Tongaat Hullet

Beatific Gumbwanda

CHIREDZI – Arbitration in the long-running wage dispute between the Zimbabwe Sugar Milling Industry Workers Union (ZISMIWU) and Zimbabwe Sugar Milling Industry Employers Association (ZSMIA) has ended with the former being awarded a 15 percent increase.
The union had sought a 39 percent increase but Justice George Smith, who led the arbitration, in his findings released on October 18, recommended that with effect from April 1, 2017, wages be increased by 15 percent for Band A employees and 7.5 percent for those in Band B.
This means that if the outcome is effected, employees will have several months in backdated salary arrears that their employers will have to clear.
“Because of the poor rainfall in 2014/15 and 2015/16, those were not profitable periods for the respondent but the respondent did give the employees a wage increase in both years. 2016/17 was a very profitable year for the respondent but the employees did not receive a wage increase that year. I consider that a wage increase should be awarded for 2017/18,” reads part of the ruling.
Employees welcomed the outcome although there are lingering worries that the employers association, which is dominated by Tongaat Hullet, will appeal against the findings.
Addressing multitudes of workers from both Hippo Valley and Triangle, ZISMIWU secretary general Rtd Major Faster Gono struck a conciliatory tone; urging employees to protect their jobs by defending Tongaat Hullet from greedy politicians.
“Tongaat Hullet Zimbabwe is company which brings food to our tables. We therefore have to jealously guard its property. If you see some of its plots being seized by politicians, you are encouraged to act accordingly in order to keep your jobs,” said Gono.
Justice Smith’s ruling states that the employer had made it clear that at the moment, it had the capacity to foot the 39 percent increase but feared some unforeseen eventualities that would eat into its profits margins and render the adjustments unsustainable.
 “Firstly, the respondent has, in various fora, pleaded that it has the capacity to pay 39% demanded by workers, but fears that because of unknown factors, such as drought, which may occur in the future, it feels that it would be imprudent to award a wage increase,” reads part of the report.
Tongaat Hullet also argued that it must be considered that the company remained the only one, in as many industries, that still paid its employees on time.
“..Irregular pay days due to inability to raise enough cash for wage payments when due. This is now a norm in Government, which has traditionally been able to pay wages and salaries on due dates. Several institutions such as quasi-Government entities, municipalities and private companies, are in arrears in terms of wage commitments. The Sugar Milling Industry has managed to pay all its employees on time,” reads part of the report.
Justice Smith was appointed arbitrator on June 19, 2017 between ZISMIWU, which pledged to accept whatever outcome of the arbitration, and the employers association which comprises Hippo Valley (Pvt) Ltd, Triangle Limited and the Zimbabwe Sugar Association.
The issue at hand was to determine whether or not there was need to increase sugarcane milling industry workers’ wages following a deadlock between the employer and the union on March 21.
The labour office had failed to settle the matter and had issued a certificate of ‘No Settlement’ before referring the matter for voluntary arbitration.
ZISMIWU wanted a 39 percent wage increase across the board, complaining that its members were the worst off in the Southern Africa sugar industry and were living way below the poverty datum line.
The union argued that the least paid workers for Tongaat Hullet employees in South Africa earned ZAR 6 000, those in Mozambique earned an equivalent of US$480, while those doing similar work in Swaziland earned an equivalent of US$400.
This contrasts starkly with employees here in Zimbabwe who earn as little as US$180.top news

GZU students donate to Alpha Cottages

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Clever Taperamoyo

MASVINGO – The Great Zimbabwe University (GZU) Students Executive Council (SEC) last week visited Alpha Cottages children’s home to donate clothes and basic commodities.
SEC vice president Jennifer Chitanda, who coordinated the charity project, said the students’ body had seen it necessary to contribute to the well-being of children at the shelter.
“We aim to reach out to Masvingo as a whole because it is our community and, as students, we appreciate the city and the people who live in it. This is part of our efforts to show that we seek not only to improve ourselves academically but to reach out to the less fortunate as well,” said Chitanda.
The students took time to tour the facility as well as to interact and play with the children.
The donations were made under the theme ‘building a generational consensus through reaching out to the needy’.
Chitanda said this was one of the many activities that her team had planned to do in order to make a change in the community.
Some of the SEC leaders who took part in the programme were minister of sports Duncan Mpaso, minister of information Tawanda Mukwazhe and deputy minister of clubs and properties Fortunate Paradza.
Last semester the students conducted another clean-up campaign and pothole-filling exercise in conjunction with the city council.local

Refreshed Bikita FC holds Mutoko

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Clayton Shereni

BIKITA – Zifa Eastern Region Division One new boys, Bikita Minerals FC last Saturday held eighth-placed Mutoko Traders FC to a nil all (0-0) draw at Lithium Stadium after a hard-fought game.
The transfer window allowed the team to beef up its cudgels with a few players who have proved to be instrumental in the team’s improved play relative to its performance over the past weeks.
The new signings were Leroy Chivangu who came in from Mutoko Traders FC, free agent John Chitiga and Terrence Mazivisa who came from Triangle FC.
The lithium miners came close to take the lead in the 25th minute after a nicely curled volley by Terrence Mazivisa but The Mutoko goalkeeper was on point to deny the hosts an early score.
Bikita FC were on the driving seat for the better part of the game with veteran defender Pardon Chinungwa creating vital chances and providing some deadly passes but only to be let down by poor finishing.
Mutoko also created a few chances for themselves but they did not manage to penetrate the solid defence commanded by the experienced team captain Peter Muzondo.
Chitiga also had a feel of the ball after coming in as a substitute in the 73rd minute by making some touches on the central forward position.
Bikita FC head coach John Phiri was not really happy by the result but was impressed by the overall performance.
“We had a good game but the boys were not as composed as one would have wanted them to be. We could have scored many goals. The new guys were in top form and they have been a force to reckon with in the team,” said Phiri.
In their next encounter, Bikita minerals will face Gutu FC at Paradise stadium in Mpandawana.sport

GZU students clean Masvingo streets

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Brighton Chiseva

MASVINGO – Fourth-year Bachelor of Education (B.Ed) students from the Great Zimbabwe University (GZU) and their lecturers last weekend embarked on a clean-up campaign in the Central Business District (CBD) in what they said was an exercise to ensure cleaner surroundings.
The campaign, which was conducted in partnership with City of Masvingo, The Environmental Management Agency (Ema), Great Zimbabwe Realtors (GZR) and other partners, ran under the theme ‘Education for Sustainable Development’.
Professor Shumirai Nyota, a senior lecturer in the faculty who led the students, said it was the desire of the team to help move the country towards achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) that include Sustainable Cities and Communities.
“Unesco believes sustainable development begins with teachers, so we have seen it fit to prepare our students by cleaning the streets. We want them to pass the knowledge to the classes that they too will teach in the future,” said Prof Nyota.
She said the focus was on Unesco’s three Rs; Reuse, Reduce and Recycle, plus Ema’s own addition ‘Rethink’.
“For the mean time, we are concentrating on reducing littering in the environment because we do not have resources to recycle or reuse,” she said.
City of Masvingo mayor Hubert Fidze also took part in the cleaning and said he was pleased by the students’ strong desire for cleaner streets.
“Don’t clean only the CBD where people see you. Let’s do it everywhere in Masvingo including at our campuses and hostels. We need to make Masvingo the cleanliest town in Zimbabwe for it carries the name of this country,” said Fidze.
He went on to urge women to go for breast cancer screening and men to be aware of prostate cancer.
He also urged students to go and register to vote.local

ERC election debate: Masvingo rejects proof of residence requirements

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A participant stresses a point during the discussion

TellZim Reporter

MASVINGO – People who took part in an election debate organised by the Election Resource Centre (ERC) at Flamboyant Hotel this afternoon expressed displeasure with the requirement for a proof of residence for one to be registered as a voter.
Many people who made contributions at the event, which had Ruvheneko Parirenyatwa as host, made it clear they do not see the reason why they should prove their village of origin when that information is already captured on the national identity card.
“Some of us are here in town but we want to be registered as voters back in our rural homes. The problem is that we are still required to produce a letter from the village head confirming that we are resident is his village. There is no logic in that because village of origin is one of the particulars captured on the ID card,” said one participant.
There were also complaints that the proof of residence requirement disenfranchises the youth because the overwhelming majority of them do not have houses of their own.
“It is being said the country needs young people to vote but that is not going to be possible because the youth are the least likely to get those documents. They don’t have houses of their own and they have to do all the pleading with parents and landlords to get that proof,” another participant said.
People’s Democratic Party (NPP) spokesperson Jeffryson Chitando, who was one of the panelists, criticised the Zimbabwe Electoral commission (Zec) for failing to engage political parties on the Biometric Voter Registration (BVR).
“Political parties are major stakeholder but there has never been any meeting with us. That is the reason why there is so much ignorance and a lot of misconceptions about the process,” said Chitando.
MDC-T secretary general Doulas Mwonzora expressed concern over the hassles that people are encountering to get proof of residence but urged people to do all they should do to be on the new voters roll.
“Young people should particularly be encouraged to vote in their numbers. When Rex Nhongo and Josiah Tongogara liberated this country, they were younger than many of us here. As the MDC-T, we say the election should accord the secrecy of the vote, the security of the vote and the security of the voter,” said Mwonzora.
Gutu South Member of Parliament (MP) Dr Paul Chimedza, who was recently appointed Minister of State for Masvingo Provincial Affairs, said Zanu PF was hard at work mobilising its supporters to register to vote.
“There are some challenges being talked about for instance the distance some people in rural areas have to walk to get to the registration centres but generally, the exercise is going on very well. As a party, we are busy mobilising our people to register to vote,” said Dr Chimedza.top news

Go register to vote, MDC-T tells vendors

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…your problems have a political solution

Upenyu Chaota

The Morgan Tsvangirai-led MDC-T says informal traders need to fight back against President Robert Mugabe’s recent order for a crackdown against them by registering to vote in large numbers.
Vendors are facing sustained pressure from a strong combination of municipal and riot police to leave the streets.
The opposition party emphasised that the crackdown against vendors can only be defeated if all vendors registered to vote, saying it was Mugabe’s problem that he failed to deliver on his 2013 promise to create 2.2 million jobs.
MDC-T national youth boss Happymore Chidziva said the people of Zimbabwe are a hardworking lot trying hard to make ends meet through honest means.
“Mugabe created a vending nation because he failed to deliver on his election promises. Right now, we have Zimbabwean in every corner of the world running away from him.
“Those that choose to stay in the country are mostly unemployed and they end up selling various items on the streets because there are no jobs. Mugabe promised them jobs but he did not deliver on that promise and now he wants to rob them of their only means of survival,” said Chidziva.
He said if Mugabe really wanted vendors off the streets, he had to create employment because most of the vendors are educated people with no choice.
“The problem we are facing as a country today has a political solution. Vendors should register to vote in their numbers and remove a regime which has robbed them of their future.
“We have been stripped of all human dignity by Mugabe and I say register to vote, go vote and defend your vote. Mugabe has failed to offer solutions to the high levels of unemployment bedevilling the county so people should exercise their constitutional right to vote,” said Chidziva.local

I did not craft AIPPA, says Mahoso

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…mocks Chinamasa’s new ministry

Tinomutenda Midzi

MASHAVA – Zimbabwe Media Commission (ZMC) Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Dr Tafataona Mahoso, whom many have dubbed the media hangman, last week dismissed claims that he was one of the chief architects of the hated Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA) but was quick to defend the piece of legislation as useful.
Delivering a lecture on cyber security to media students at Great Zimbabwe University (GZU)’s Simon Muzenda School of Culture and Heritage Studies, Dr Mahoso said he did not take part in the crafting of what is widely regarded as a repressive piece of legislation, but insisted the law was there for a good reason.
“People are saying I and Professor Jonathan Moyo masterminded AIPPA. The answer is we didn’t. AIIPA was not even put in place by President Mugabe. It is a law which was put in place by the government for security reasons and it is there for the good of the country. Many people are saying it’s a bad law, it’s a draconian law, and it’s there to suppress media freedom and do many more bad things. People have to read it (AIPPA) better to understand it,” Dr Mahoso said.
He also mocked the newly-created Ministry of Cyber Security, Threat Detection and Mitigation which is headed by Patrick Chinamasa, arguing it defied logic to try and control something which was already out of hand.
He said what was needed was to properly educate the young generation on the dangers of abusing social media rather than try to muzzle the platform altogether.
“Munhu akavhara danga mombe dzapaza tingati anepfungwa here? That is the same as trying to regulate social media when it is already out of hand. What is needed is for the institutions to impart the rightful education to the students,” Dr Mahoso said.local

Peace bill inadequate for Zim’s healing needs, says NTJWG

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NTJWG memorialisation thematic leader Rev Dr Ray Motsi (right) poses for a photo after handing over a copy of NTJWG’s NPRC guide to City of Masvingo mayor Hubert Fidze (centre) and TellZim News director Golden Maunganidze

Moses Ziyambi

MASVINGO – The proposed National Peace and Reconciliation Bill (H.B2, 2017) was crafted in a hazy manner, a weakness which leaves a lot of gaps in the country’s efforts to fully account and bring closure to its turbulent past, the National Transitional Justice Working Group (NTJWG) has said.
The group hosted a stakeholder discussion in Masvingo last Friday where it was heard that the bill, which now awaits President Robert Mugabe’s ascension, contained numerous errors of commission and omission that will make ultimate healing difficult.
NTJWG executive director Blessing Gorejena pinpointed what she called the bill’s ‘many blind spots’ that will weaken the National Peace and Reconciliation Commission (NPRC)’s hand in executing its mandate.
“Most contentious of the bill’s provisions is probably the issue of the Ministerial Certificate which the minister in charge of state security can serve on the commission to interdict it from revealing any information which he/she feels could work against national interest.
“The bill also lacks victim-centredness as it does not at all talk about the victim and the perpetrator such that we are left to guess on that although the logical assumption is that in any post-conflict settlement, there is a victim and there is a perpetrator,” said Gorejena.
She urged people to participate in consultative meetings on the bill and make their opinions known, saying though the bill was vague in many respects, it still offered a critical starting point.
“It’s not one of those bills you would want to celebrate and say, yes, now we have arrived but it offers a starting point nevertheless. It is not perfect but it motivates dialogue,” she said.
The Legal Resources Foundation (LRF)’s Rumbidzai Chivasa concurred, saying the current bill, though not the most ideal, was better than its predecessor the National Peace and Reconciliation Bill (H.B 13, 2015) which was gazetted in 2015 but was withdrawn from parliament in May 2016 after severe criticism by stakeholders.
“The current bill is not the best but it is different from the previous one. We have somewhere to begin and we urge all people to take this process towards national healing seriously by participating in all discussions,” said Chivasa.
Heal Zimbabwe Trust research and policy advocacy officer Edknowledge Mandikwaza said once the NPRC begin to operate, it must take into consideration the different episodes of grievances and victimisation that happened in the past.
Mandikwaza also said not all grievances are political in nature as some of them tend to take a socio-economic dimension as exemplified by such sad chapters as Chingwizi, Chisumbanje and Chiyadzwa as well as the perceived economic marginalisation of certain regions.
“We have also found that people want a public acknowledgement of rights violations that were committed against them, accompanied by employment creation and reparations,” said Mandikwaza.
Once signed into law, the bill will operationalise the NPRC, one of the five independent commissions established by Chapter 12 of the 2013 Constitution of Zimbabwe.local

Outcry as ZIMSEC exams continue leaking

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TellZim Reporter

MASVINGO – Parents with pupils sitting for their November 2017 Zimbabwe School Examination Council (Zimsec) exams have expressed dissatisfaction over the continued leaking of exams.
Several cases of pupils caught with forbidden material have been reported to the police in Masvingo, with one incident at a local school said to be involving external candidates who smuggled answers into the exam room.
It is said the students had got hold of the mathematics paper they were going to sit for and they had written all the answers on their rulers for easy copying but were bust by alert invigilators who told school authorities before the incident was reported at Masvingo Central Police Station.
Zimbabwe School Examination Council (Zimsec) Masvingo regional director Silvester Dandira professed ignorance of exam leakage cases and referred all questions to the exam body’s head office in Harare.
“I haven’t received any report of leaking examinations. Maybe if you contact the head office, they would be in a position to comment on that matter,” said Dandira.
Efforts to get a comment from the head office proved fruitless as the telephone kept ringing without being answered.local