Home Blog Page 8056

Remarks by Zwizwai on Marange inaccurate

0

The MDC has described as unfortunate and inaccurate remarks by MDC Deputy Minister of Mines and Mining Development, Murisi Zwizwai, that there were no killings in the Chiadzwa mining area of Manicaland province.

In a statement the party said the remarks were premature and inaccurate in the absence of an investigation into the murky dealings in the Chiadzwa diamond fields where a lot of things happened out of the public eye. Zwizwai’s claims are therefore fact-hostile and evidence-free.

‘The MDC calls on the inclusive government and Parliament to commission an investigation into the goings-on in Chiadzwa. We believe that a thorough investigation will enable the inclusive government to come clean on what really transpired before senior government officials seek refuge in denial.’

‘Zimbabweans are only aware that whatever happened at Chiadzwa remains shrouded in secrecy. There is no public information as to how much the country has accrued from the diamond fields where ordinary Zimbabweans were displaced to make way for politically-connected fat cats and politicians. There are unconfirmed allegations of mass graves and massive looting which cannot be easily dismissed in the absence of an investigation.’

‘The MDC is a party of excellence. We remain true and committed to our Constitutional values of honesty, transparency and accountability. We believe that Hon Zwizwai’s statement remains misleading, unfortunate and inaccurate before a public report is tabled before the nation on what really transpired in Chiadzwa.’

‘We therefore call upon Parliament and the inclusive government to set a Commission of Inquiry to investigate and lay bare the facts of what is obtaining in Chiadzwa,’ the statement read.

Sadomba Signs For Al-Hilal Of Sudan

0

Chipolopolo Warriors and former Dynamos striker Edward Sadomba has broken fresh ground by becoming the first Zimbabwean football player to feature competitively in Sudan after signing for renowned African campaigners Al-Hilal in Khartoum last week.

According to The Herald, Sadomba, who turns 26 in August, completed the move, which netted a cool €350,000 (R4 million) for his side, Wits University, even before the Zimbabwean kicked a single ball for the South African side.

A hot property on the Zimbabwean scene when he donned Dynamos’ colours during their fairy-tale semi-final finish in last year’s African Champions League competition, Sadomba’s exploits impressed Wits coach Roger de Sa, but his transfer in January this year was scuppered after the Students discovered they had already exceeded their quota for foreign players.

Sadomba then found himself at an unlikely destination in Mozambique, where Atletico Muculmana took him up on a six-month loan agreement from the South African side. The Mbare-born footballer proved good value for money, scoring seven goals during his five month stay in Maputo.

Sadomba was poised to revert to Wits upon the expiry of the loan deal at the end of the month but received the news last week that he would be moving permanently to Khartoum.

Wits officials confirmed at the weekend that their Zimbabwean signing had been permanently transferred after Al-Hilal “came knocking hard on the door” for a striker of Sadomba’s calibre.

De Sa, a firm believer in raw Zimbabwean talent, told journalists he was sorry never to benefit from Sadomba’s services but felt the deal made good business sense for the club as it enables them to flex more muscle on the market.

Sadomba, who has previously played in South Africa for lower division side Tembisa Classic, was tutored by Regis Dzenga’s Agatha Sheneti Academy at Mt. Pleasant High, graduating into the senior ranks with Dzenga’s Harare United before the move down south. Goal.com

Gappah book "Easterly" up for award

0

By Petina Gappah

Some great and surprising news: my book has been short-listed for the Frank O’Connor Short Story Award which is funded by the Cork City Council and organised by the Munster Literature Centre. I have been shortlisted along with Charlotte Grimshaw from New Zealand, Shi-Li Kow from Malaysia, Phillip O Ceillaigh from Ireland,  and Wells Tower and Simon Van Booy from the United States.

This news was broken to the world yesterday afternoon not by a newspaper, but by a blogger, Women Rule Writer, at 13.14.   All bloggers hail thee, o fair Nuala.  See also the Munster Literature Centre website and this report from the Guardian.

The award has in previous years been won by my girl Yiyun Li, Haruki Murakami, Miranda July and Jumpha Lahiri, so it is a real honour to be on the short list.

This means that I get to go back to visit my new love, Ireland, of valley green and towering crag. Until I went to Ireland, I was always amused by those white (and African-American) tourists who go to one African country or city and come back proclaiming their love for Africa, all of  it, but I am telling you, I  went to Galway for two days and I fell in love with Ireland.

And I fell in love with the Irish. Well, not all of them, I mean, not the murderers, or thugs, or men who hit women or kids who throw litter everywhere –  unlike the Western tourists who love all Africans, I am more discriminating in my taste.

So I am really pleased to be going back to  Ireland, to Cork this time.

I am looking forward to meeting the other writers, and reading them, the only one whose work I know is Wells Tower, whose book (Everything Ravaged, Everything Burned ) I really liked. You will recall that he was one of the five writers reviewed by James Lasdun in his brilliant examination of the state of the short story a few months ago in The Observer.  I also like what I have read about him, I loved this statement, from an interview in the New York Observer:

Being a human being isn’t just all misery and despair.  There’s a lot of available joy out there, even if we don’t often find it. I think that fiction should find opportunities for joy.   I think what people really want is fiction that in some tiny way makes their life more meaningful and makes the world seem like a richer place. The world is awfully short on joy and richness, and I think to some extent it’s the fiction writer’s job to salvage some of that and to give it to us in ways that we can believe in.

I will drink to that. And to the Frank O’Connor award too. Cheers all round!

MDC Cabinet Boycott Mere Posturing

0

By Denford Magora

You have, I am sure, heard by now that the MDC-T boycotted cabinet today. They were protesting the moving of cabinet from Tuesday to Monday. They figured the move by Mugabe, who leaves for an African Union Summit in Libya on Tuesday (today), was designed to deny the Prime Minister the opportunity to chair cabinet.

The boycott is mere posturing, of course.

The threat by Deputy PM Thokozani Khupe that the MDC-T reserves the right to disengage from the Coalition government is also hollow and only serves to drive the final nail into any prospects for recovery.

More importantly, though, people must also realise that this is mere posturing, designed to hoodwink the public into thinking the MDC-T has finally retrieved its spine from the trash can.

After all, Simba Makoni is launching his party in a day or so. People have made it clear that they are ready for real change.

Still, it only serves to expose yet again that the MDC-T is all at sea. Prime Minister Tsvangirai told the media over the weekend in South Africa that the MDC-T and ZANU PF will succeed or fail together.

In effect, then, he has tied the fortunes of his party to the fortunes of Mugabe and ZANU PF. Since Mugabe and his party are destined to fail (and the Prime Minister knows this) then it means he has also accepted that he and his party will fail.

Yet today, his Deputy President in the MDC-T was singing a different tune. She even exhumed the issues of Gideon Gono, Johannes Tomana (both of whom Mugabe refuses to fire despite the MDC-T’s insistence), governors, ambassadors, Roy Bennett….it was a tour de force.

But we thought the Prime Minister said Bennett and all the other issues are solved? Were we not told by the MDC-T that Bennett would be sworn in around August?

Has that changed?

And if Governors and the like have all been agreed to as announced by the Prime Minister and celebrated by blind MDC-T followers, why are they still an issue?

We thought we heard the MDC-T announce at the weekend that SADC would meet in the first week of July, yet today they were lamenting the fact that SADC won’t meet to discuss Zimbabwe?

It is all hot air. Tsvangirai holds absolute sway in the MDC-T right now. He tells them, “You better listen to me” and they listen. He thinks everything is fine. He thinks things are going very well. He would rather ignore the abuses and breaches from ZANU PF and simply paper over the cracks, joking and dining with Mugabe.

His views will carry the day.

As for this boycott posturing. You will hear nothing more of it once the Prime Minister is back at the office.

End of story.

Simba Makoni launches political party

0

By Denford Magora

Wednesday 1 July 2009, Dr Simba Makoni finally launches the Mavambo.Kusile.Dawn party. Yes, the party will be known as Mavambo.Kusile.Dawn

The launch will be held at Stoddart Hall in Mbare, a teeming high-density suburb of Harare, the capital city. The function starts at 10:30a.m.

The party launches with an interim leadership to be headed by Dr Makoni and will start rolling out formal structures all over the country soon after that.

Already, I understand delegates from all the provinces of Zimbabwe have registered for the event, the most exciting political development in the country since the launch of the Inclusive Government of Robert Mugabe (The Solution) and Morgan Tsvangirai.

In a sign of just how little things have changed, the new party had to seek police clearance to hold the launch meeting, and the clearance was delivered to the party offices in Harare only this morning, paving the way for the announcement to be officially made.

I will give a full account of the proceedings here soon after the event itself is done.

All I can say is that finally, the people of Zimbabwe will have a true alternative, headed by the cleanest politician in Zimbabwe (who even refused to be allocated a farm while MDC-T politicians fall over each other to grab the remaining farms).

second update……

It is just after 9 in the morning in Zimbabwe and there is quite a crowd, according to our people on he ground. Most can not fit inside the hall, so some have gathered outside, where two flags are flying: the Zimbabwe flag and the Mavambo flag.

Dr Makoni will be arriving after 10 this morning at the hall to deliver his launch speech.

At the office, it is a hive of activity (you will have to excuse that particular cliche – very bad, I know, but that is how it is), with the phones ringing off the hook and people confirming their attendance.

And would you know it, after word got out yesterday that Dr Makoni and MKD will be launching the party at 10:30a.m. today, the Prime Minister immediately announced that he would be holding a briefing of his own at exactly the time.

He made the announcement yesterday after midday.

Still, his is not a public event, but restricted to the media and diplomats. Even so, the media is excited at the launch of MKD, with almost every single one of them saying, “We have been waiting for this.”

I was very surprised at the genuine delight from the media when the invitations were extended to them.

I was going to try and live-blog the launch ceremony and I may still do that.

To check if I am online and blogging the launch LIVE and as it happens, just scroll down to the bottom of the page, where the chatroll will be attached and where will be reporting the event live.

Keep in mind that the event starts at 10:30a.m. Harare time.

If not, I will update the blog as soon as the event is finished!

Tsvangirai tour gave Zanu PF no comfort

0

By Eddie Cross

There can be little doubt that the “fast track land reform programme”
launched by Zanu PF in 2000 has been an unmitigated disaster. Not only has it resulted in agricultural output declining over 70 per cent but all the industries that were built up to supply agriculture with its many needs and those companies that depended on farm output for raw materials, have suffered collapse.

While the target of this unlawful and unjust campaign were 4000 white Zimbabwean large scale commercial farmers, the impact was felt across the whole economy – small scale farmers suffering even more than their large scale counterparts because they were less able to protect themselves from the side effects. Whatever the protagonists of this campaign might say, this was just an act of wholesale piracy with the State offering the booty to their thugs in compensation for doing their will.

Where was God while all this was going on? The Bible teaches that He is the “defender of the poor” and that He will bring justice to those treated in this way. But this is little compensation or comfort for the thousands of families whose lives were torn apart and homes destroyed. Farmers, whose lives had been invested in their farms and who know no other occupation and who now live a much diminished existence in towns and foreign lands.

In Genesis we read about how and why God set up the world and then brought mankind into existence. We read that He put us in charge and made us collectively responsible for the welfare and management of this tiny globe He has hung in space to act as our abode. He watches with sadness when we do crazy things – but He seldom intervenes, that is our business and He leaves us to create or destroy the creation we are a part of.

However He always acts to protect the interests and lives of those who are His children and follow His teaching. In addition He often turns a bad situation to good in unexpected ways. So it is with this particular human made disaster.

Among the farmers displaced are many fine Christians. Their faith calls on them to forgive those who did these awful things to them and in most cases they have done so. However at the same time He has often called them to devote their skills to helping the small farmers to make a better living for themselves.

One farmer has become the largest ostrich producer in the world – using small growers to produce the birds while he organises all the inputs and markets their production. Another has taken all he learned farming nearly 4000 hectares of dryland crops employing what he felt were godly principles, to train farmers how to use their land more effectively. This system now guides tens of thousands of small farmers in Zimbabwe and the technology and systems are being adopted in over 20 countries across Africa.

I sat in a meeting this past week where we were looking at how to support the small scale sector this coming summer. I happen to think that we are unlikely to get another good season this year, the Indian monsoons are late and light, Europe and the USA are having a very wet summer. The El Nino off South America is strengthening, all point to a lousy season. Since it seems that Zanu PF is intent on destroying what is left of commercial agriculture this winter, we have no choice but to target our whole effort on small scale agriculture.

It was quite an experience for me to see those dispossessed farmers sitting around a table and putting their ideas and vision together. Some have made remarkable progress and they will reach several hundred thousands small scale farmers this year. In particular I was impressed by the zero tillage concepts being taught with mulching and the use of organic forms of fertiliser.

Would this have happened if the farm invasions had not taken place? Perhaps not but my most immediate thought was that here was God turning another human disaster into good, almost despite ourselves. Many of the large scale farmers that I talk to say they would not go back to business as usual on their farms if they got the chance to go back. They talk about using their operations as a base for helping out the smaller producers in their districts.

Apart from this, we started the constitutional consultative process this week when 10 meetings were held at Provincial level to meet stakeholders and select delegates to attend the stakeholder’s conference in Harare in mid July. Zanu PF is doing all they can to stop the process. They have stated that there is “no need” for the whole exercise – “after all we have a draft in the form of the Kariba Constitution” which was signed at Kariba in 2007. None of us had any say in that draft.  What the negotiators thought they were doing when they did that I have no idea, but we are never going to accept a draft that we had no hand in drafting.

Then they said we could not go ahead because there was no money. We went out and found the money for the first phase and will probably raise the funds for the whole process. Zanu then said we could not use donor funds for this process! What claptrap – this is the most important job that the Transitional Government has to do in its short life. We are going to do it properly.

Morgan is still being criticised on every front for his remarks while on his recent trip abroad. Just look at these headlines in Fridays Independent
newspaper: “Mugabe dispatches team to counter Tsvangirai trip”; “Tsvangirai call on exiles ill-thought out”; “In defence of Tsvangirai”; “Tsvangirai loosing touch with reality”; “Wake up call for naïve Tsvangirai”; “Scepticism dogs Tsvangirai tour”; “Warm welcome but little cash for Tsvangirai”.

The actual facts about this three week tour are in fact quite different.
When he was sworn in, he was urged by Diplomats in Harare to visit their home capitals. He at first said he would not travel for six months. However pressure built up for this trip and it was decided to try and do as many capitals as he could in a short time. Bear in mind that no Zimbabweans leader has been received in major capitals for over 12 years. The objectives were quite simple – to re-establish contact with major western leaders and start the process of reengagement. The issue of additional money was not a major objective. Donor budgets are set well in advance and we already have had a doubling of foreign aid in the first half of 2009. We knew well in advance that new money was unlikely – certainly not in any quantum.

Was the trip a success – by any measure it was. In every capital he visited, he was seen by the Head of State and given a warm reception. He was able to brief these leaders on the problems of the Transitional Government and of the needs we have to get through to a new election in 2010. I am sure there is a much better understanding of the Zimbabwe situation and that we will get the strategic support we need to craft a new constitution and re-establish service delivery to our people. They will also have understood what we need to do to get free and fair conditions for the next elections.

The tour gave no comfort to the Zanu PF leadership at home. In country after country, our team was told, in no uncertain terms, what we as a country have to do to regain their confidence and support. Free up the media, stop abusing our legal system, respect private property rights, restore fundamental freedoms. Even the famous booing in that Cathedral in the UK bore no comfort – what those exiles were saying is “we want no compromise; Mugabe and his henchmen must go”. We agree, but we are locked into a deal by the region and must simply live with it and try to overcome the obstacles they will put in our way to a new Zimbabwe.

Morgan is home today – next week he resumes the fight for justice and freedom in Zimbabwe. Rested and I hope strengthened in his resolve to do the right thing for all Zimbabweans. Please note that trip to the East by several Zanu PF heavyweights on a “fund raising tour”. I happen to know that negotiations are well under way for a US$700 million line of credit from China. Watch the State press when they claim that this facility is the result of this trip. I just hope that China and Russia are too savvy to be used in this way.

Eddie Cross
Harare, 28th June 2009

China offers Zimbabwe US$950 billion

0
By Tichaona Sibanda

Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai announced on Tuesday that the government had managed to secure US$950 million in credit lines from China, to help rebuild the country.

Zimbabwe needs an estimated $8-$10 billion to rebuild the destroyed infrastructure and to ease the 90 percent unemployment rate. Briefing journalists and diplomats in Harare, Tsvangirai said during his recent tour to Europe and the United States he also managed to raise over $US500 million, which will go towards the provision of basic services such as health and education. The Prime Minister said the amount of assistance that was raised on his visit does not reflect the enormous support the government will be able to utilise, if they manage to fulfil all political obligations.

‘In every country, each leader I met expressed reservations about the delays in the full implementation of the Global Political Agreement. They asked, why, after almost five months, had fundamental obligations undertaken by the respective political parties not been implemented,’ Tsvangirai said.
He added; ‘In our drive to rebuild Zimbabwe, we are not limited to a ‘look west’ or ‘look east’ policy, but rather we are committed to engaging our friends in all parts of the globe.’

Leaders in Europe and the United States have raised concerns about the success of the new, transitional political dispensation, as the unity government has clearly not been fully constituted due to the outstanding issues.

‘These issues are not foreign benchmarks imposed from outside Zimbabwe, but are our own conditions that we committed ourselves to meeting when we signed the GPA. As such, the concerns of the international community are legitimate and the three political parties as the signatories to the GPA, and particularly the leaders of those parties, must take responsibility for the failure to implement fully the obligations we have signed up to,’ the Prime Minister added.

Economist Luke Zunga told us the reason why China has been able to avail this huge amount of money was because they have never been concerned about human rights issues in the country, unlike other western countries.
‘Whether Zimbabwe is a rogue state or not, that’s not an issue with the Chinese because they’ve always supported ZANU PF.’ Zunga said.- SWRA

Statement from PM Tsvangirai on his trip

0

Statement by the Prime Minister of Zimbabwe, The Right Honourable Morgan Tsvangirai, Upon His Return to Zimbabwe from Europe and The United States, Harare, 30 June, 2009

Members of the Diplomatic Corp, Members of the Media, Ladies and Gentlemen;
Three weeks ago, I undertook my inaugural international visit as Prime Minister of Zimbabwe, visiting the United States, Scandinavia and Europe
This visit was initiated by my office as part of the implementation of the
100 Day Plan and the commitments Government made at the Victoria Falls
Ministerial retreat, where it was agreed that we need to reengage the
international community at a political and economic level.

The visit was an essential step in the process of repositioning Zimbabwe in
the family of nations and redefining our national foreign policy agenda. The
primary purpose of the visit was to begin Zimbabwe’s re-engagement with key international donors whose support of the people of Zimbabwe goes back many years.

In this respect, the visit was an overwhelming success. Every one of the
countries I visited expressed their unequivocal support for the direction
our country is taking, for our democratisation agenda and for the people of
Zimbabwe. In addition, in Brussels I launched the formal re-engagement
process with the European Union as outlined in the Cotonou Agreement.

The response from the EU was immediate and encouraging. The EU committed itself to availing us with transitional and humanitarian support to the tune of more than US$150 million. They also pledged more support which will be guided by the way in which we meet our own political commitments as outline in the GPA.

As a nation, we should be humbled by the number of friends we have
internationally and for their desire to work with us to rebuild our country.
As part of the re-engagement process, I discussed with the leaders I met,
the opportunities that Zimbabwe has and the obstacles that we still face to
realise those opportunities. In this regard, I also raised the issue of the
transitional support that we require to move towards delivering the
freedoms, services and society that Zimbabweans demand and deserve.

In this respect as well, the trip was a success. In every country I visited,
each leader that I met expressed their desire and ability to help us during
this transitional phase.

The pledges we received, for both humanitarian and transitional assistance
totalling almost US$500 million. My office is in the process of finalising
the amounts pledged and their allocations and details will be released in
due course. At this point, I would also like to state that in our drive to
rebuild Zimbabwe, we are not limited to a “look west” or “look east” policy,
but rather we are committed to engaging our friends in all parts of the
globe.

While I was away, Government, through Finance Minister, Tendai Biti, also
secured lines of credit from China totalling US$950 million. Ladies and
Gentlemen, the amount of assistance that was raised on my visit to Europe
and the United States does not reflect the enormous support we will be able
to utilise if we are to fulfil all our political obligations.

In every country, each leader I met expressed reservations about the delays
in the full implementation of the Global Political Agreement. They asked,
why, after almost five months, had fundamental obligations undertaken by the respective political parties not been implemented?

Both in Europe and the United States, leaders stated that they had concerns
about the success of the new, transitional political dispensation as the
Government has not yet been fully constituted due to the outstanding issues.
These issues are not foreign benchmarks imposed from outside Zimbabwe, but are our own conditions that we committed ourselves to meeting when we signed the Global Political Agreement (GPA).

As such, the concerns of the international community are legitimate and the
three political parties as the signatories to the GPA, and particularly the
leaders of those parties, must take responsibility for the failure to
implement fully the obligations we have signed up to.

As a nation, if we want outside assistance, we must first prove that we are
able to fulfil the obligations we have undertaken within the agreement that
was brokered by SADC. In this regard, we will be judged by what we do and not by what we say. Actions speak louder than words and while I was away there were instances of peaceful protestors being beaten by our police, innocent individuals arrested on trumped up charges and continued vilification of the MDC by the state media. What do these actions say about our commitment to building a new Zimbabwe?

Ladies and Gentlemen, those parties and individuals that are blocking the
full implementation of the GPA are blocking national progress and
international assistance.

The outstanding issues that must be resolved, and resolved immediately, are
a matter of record and were articulated clearly yesterday by Deputy Prime
Minister Khupe.
The Ministers from my party disengaged from the Cabinet meeting held
yesterday. I understand their frustrations and concerns. It is the same
frustration expressed by Zimbabweans in general and the international
community that we wish to reengage with as a nation. These frustrations
emanate from the slow pace of the implementation of the GPA.

As a principal in the inclusive Government, I have taken it upon myself to
engage my two partners, President Mugabe and Deputy Prime Minister
Mutambara, to address these issues and bring finality to the formation of
the inclusive Government. This engagement includes the referral to SADC of
some of the outstanding issues.

I endorse the statement by Deputy Prime Minister Khupe, that the greatest
challenge Zimbabwe faces is one of old attitudes that refuse to accept the
new order. We all have a responsibility as Zimbabweans in general, and the
three political parties in particular, to simply implement what we agreed.

Zimbabweans do not want a half-implemented agreement that brings with it
more disappointment than hope and more frustration than progress. My party
is committed to the GPA and committed to taking our country forward, with
the support of our people.

Those residual elements in our midst must decide whether or not they are
going to honour the commitments they made or whether they are going to
continue to attempt to obstruct and impede the progress of our nation.

It must be understood by all today, that any individual, or group of
individuals, who are standing in the way of progress in the implementation
of the GPA, are also standing in the way of Zimbabwe’s rebirth and
reengagement with the family of nations at a political and economic level,
including the removal of any restrictive measures..

Those who are serious about fulfilling these commitments will work to
immediately resolve the outstanding issues in a matter of days, not weeks.
Ladies and Gentlemen, my recent trip confirmed that the international
community is ready and willing to help Zimbabwe, but they need us to help
ourselves by standing by the political commitments we have undertaken. The
time for talking about our commitments is now past and we must implement
those obligations for the betterment of our nation.

The MDC expects, and the people deserve, only true partners in progress who
are prepared to put the best interests of our nation above all other
considerations. As Prime Minister, I am committed to Zimbabwe’s
re-engagement. I am committed to rebuilding our nation and I call upon all
patriotic Zimbabweans to join me on this irreversible journey to a new
people-driven constitution and free and fair elections.

I thank you.

Tsvangirai: Coalition Govt not in danger

0

By Angus Shaw

HARARE, Zimbabwe (AP) — Zimbabwe’s troubled coalition government is in no danger of collapsing despite accusations that President Robert Mugabe’s party is blocking reform, Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai said Tuesday.

Tsvangirai, a former opposition leader who joined Mugabe in the unity government in February, spoke to reporters a day after one of Tsvangirai’s top deputies said their party was considering disengaging from the coalition.

Tsvangirai’s Movement for Democratic Change has complained about harassment and arrests of Mugabe’s opponents and Mugabe’s unilateral appointments of top officials. But Tsvangirai said Tuesday that leaders must stand by their political commitments.

“There are frustrations,” Tsvangirai said of the comments Monday from his deputy, Thokozani Khupe, about disengaging. But “I can assure you there’s no pulling out of this agreement. There’s no reason the government is going to collapse.”

Some of Tsvangirai’s supporters within and outside his party had questioned the wisdom of entering the coalition, and tensions within the Movement for Democratic Change have been evident for months. But Tsvangirai has long insisted he sees the coalition as the only way to move Zimbabwe forward, and, so far, his opinion has prevailed.

Khupe said the latest irritant came when Mugabe rescheduled the weekly Cabinet meeting from Tuesday to Monday because he was going to be out of town for an African Union summit in Libya. At a news conference, Khupe depicted that as a snub to Tsvangirai, her party’s leader, saying he should have chaired the meeting in Mugabe’s absence.

Tsvangirai and Mugabe formed their coalition after being pressed by neighbors to end a decade of violent confrontation and work together to resolve the southern African nation’s severe economic crisis.

Tsvangirai said Tuesday he and Mugabe would discuss problems in the coalition when Mugabe returned from the AU summit.

Tsvangirai’s party earlier had called on the neighboring countries in the Southern African Development Community that pushed for the coalition to step in to help sort out problems, but the prime minister said Tuesday that Zimbabwe’s leaders could come to a resolution.

“We can do this on our own,” Tsvangirai said. “We don’t even need SADC.”

Tsvangirai’s party has objected to Mugabe’s appointment of loyalists as the central bank governor and the attorney general, the arrests of and attacks on independent rights activists and Movement for Democratic Change lawmakers, and the seizures of white-owned farms.

The Movement for Democratic Change also accuses Mugabe loyalists of blocking democratic and media reforms.

Tsvangirai returned Monday after a three week trip to Europe and the United States he said was aimed at re-engaging with Western nations after a decade of isolation for Zimbabwe.

“The visit was an overwhelming success,” he said at Tuesday’s news conference. “We should be humbled by the number of friends we have internationally and for their desire to work with us to rebuild our country.”

Each leader he met, including President Barack Obama, pointed to delays over reforms and the need for a return to the rule of law after years of political and economic turmoil.

Tsvangirai said such concerns were “legitimate.” While he was away, police beat peaceful protesters and political violence and intimidation continued in Zimbabwe.

Aid, trade and travel restrictions imposed by Western nations on Mugabe and his top aides remain in place. Tsvangirai said attempts by Mugabe hard-liners to block reform made it difficult to persuade the West to lift “restrictive measures.”

Mugabe’s party blames sanctions imposed by the West for the southern African country’s economic meltdown. Critics point to the collapse of the agriculture-based economy after the seizures of thousands of white-owned commercial farms that began in the former regional breadbasket in 2000.

Tsvangirai’s trip garnered nearly $500 million in humanitarian aid to be disbursed mainly through independent aid organizations, a move that has irked Mugabe’s party.

Human rights groups criticized Tsvangirai for glossing over human rights violations and accused him of being an apologist for Mugabe while in the West. During his trip, Tsvangirai described Mugabe — who previously tried to use violence to crush the MDC — as an “an indispensable, irreplaceable part of the transition.” Tsvangirai has made similar comments at home.

Abel Chikoma, head of the Zimbabwe Human Rights Forum, said Zimbabwean exiles who jeered Tsvangirai in Britain and many of his party’s supporters at home wanted Mugabe out of office immediately.

“Tsvangirai finds himself having to defend the indefensible,” Chikoma said.

Dr Magaisa analyses Tsvangirai trip

0

By Alex Magaisa

THREE weeks ago, Zimbabwe’s Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai left on a tour of Europe and North America, much of which is collectively referred to as the West.

As the tour unfolded two major objectives were apparent. First, the trip sought to promote re-engagement between Zimbabwe and the West whose relationship over the past 10 years has been severely estranged.

Second, the mission sought to facilitate ways of funding the new Inclusive Government which is basically operating on less than a shoe-string budget, a circumstance that was largely authored by gross mismanagement of national resources.

By and large Tsvangirai was warmly received by the leaders of the many countries that he visited. However, his trip to London was overshadowed by the ugly scenes of protests by sections of the Zimbabwean Diaspora more of which will be said later in this article.

It was evident from the various receptions he got that Tsvangirai is now acknowledged as a national leader. Before this trip, Tsvangirai had visited these countries as an opposition leader but on this occasion he was a man transformed; a metamorphosis that also took many of his hosts and observers by surprise.

His new capacity has brought new objectives and also a different language of politics, some of which his hosts and observers found hard to comprehend, let alone accept. Tsvangirai could have taken the easier option and spoke the language of condemnation that sits easily in the pages of the media in these parts.

Instead, he chose to speak positively of his relationship with President Mugabe. Some have accused him of not being faithful to the truth on certain issues such as the situation on the farms and the human rights issues.

It did not help that at a time when he was trying to sell a positive image an influential human rights body, Amnesty International also issued a damning review of Zimbabwe’s precarious human rights situation.

To be sure, this was a difficult voyage. Tsvangirai has been a recipient of generous Western support in leading the fight for democracy in Zimbabwe. For that he has been accused by his erstwhile opponents of being a Western puppet.

Yet, the decision to join the government headed by Mugabe was not popular among some Zimbabweans and in the West. It is possible that some of his old friends in the West now doubt his credibility. But as a leader in the new government it is in his interests to ensure that it succeeds in its mission. Yet to do so, the bankrupt country needs resource-injection from somewhere.

In this respect, Tsvangirai has the unenviable task of persuading the Western world to provide some funding to kick-start the economy. Yet to do so he needs to persuade the West that Mugabe is now a reformed character or at least that he has enough power to ensure the resources are used fairly and effectively. He cannot possibly do this whilst at the same time appearing to condemn his new partners.
Thus it has appeared that he has tried too hard perhaps to paint a picture that the government is on the right path and has good prospects.

Yet in so doing he has drawn the wrath of his constituency, who feel that in fact there is not enough progress at all; those who consider that the forces of continuity still hold sway in Zimbabwe. With the problems on the farms being highlighted and the issue of arrest and mistreatment of those accused of political offences still brewing, the confusion over the application of media regulations, and the clear violations of court orders still continuing, Zimbabwe’s positive image has proved to be a hard sell. Clearly, Tsvangirai has had his work cut out.

It is hardly surprising that although he has been warmly embraced by the West, the begging pot has received very little. Yet it would have been naïve to expect that Tsvangirai would return with bags of cash.

This trip has to be seen for what it truly was — a tentative step toward re-engagement with the Western bloc. It had been years since Zimbabwe and Western countries had shared the same table on a bilateral basis. The hostility caused deterioration in trust and confidence, key tenets of any sound relationship.

These elements of a relationship cannot be restored overnight. Therefore, I see this as being only the beginning in a long process of relationship repair and much of this lies in our court.

Some of the key things that ought to be done require no investment at all from the state. Liberating the media, enabling a free environment where civil rights are protected does not cost money. If anything, it facilitates creativity and enterprise which can help to ease the unemployment situation.

The government ought to play its role in rebuilding Zimbabwe’s image and that requires the cessation of all the retrogressive things that continue to hold us down. We can use so many words but it all comes down to just two words of a simple type: common sense. The leadership must quite simply be guided by common sense but sadly this always seems to be a scarce resource, even though it’s free.

As indicated earlier, the biggest blemish on Tsvangirai’s trip was the ugly reception that he got during his speech to Zimbabweans at London’s Southwark’s Cathedral. A section of the crowd was not pleased with Tsvangirai’s general call for people to return home.

This reaction must have come as a shock to the visitors. The last time a national leader was booed and heckled by his supporters he panicked.

This was when in 1997, at the Heroes Acre in Harare, liberation war veterans broke with tradition and heckled President Mugabe during a graveside speech. President Mugabe panicked. This humiliation had never happened to him before.

The result was that he paid out $50 000 to each person who claimed to be a war veteran. This was the Zimbabwe dollar when it was still a proper dollar. A few weeks later this and combination of other factors contributed to the collapse of the Zimbabwe dollar on 14 November 1997, a date often associated with the start of the real show of the cataclysmic fall of Zimbabwean economy.

One hopes Tsvangirai does not panic from the scenes in London. It could be very easy for him and others to dismiss the Diaspora as a useless constituency that deserves little if any attention.

I think it’s important to take seriously the concerns raised by those who expressed their resentment however disrespectful it might have been carried. Perhaps there is concern that the prime minister is trying too hard to sell a product that passed its sell-by date centuries ago.

But it is also important for the PM to know that the heckles do not necessarily represent the homogenous views of all Zimbabweans in the Diaspora. Indeed, contrary to general thought, the Diaspora is not a homogenous entity — there are many faces and characters of the Zimbabwean Diaspora — their concerns, fears and interests may meet at times but they are not necessarily uniform across the board.

There may in fact, be many who acknowledged his call and understood it, not as an order from the emperor but simply as a call for re-engagement.

I do think though that the Prime Minister’s advisory team could have done better and that they have learnt a lot from this episode. Every leader has researchers, advisors and speechwriters. A leader is as good as those around him.

We often marvel at how effective President Obama is in delivering the right speeches to different audiences but what we do not realise is that he has a great team around him; a team that works its socks off to prepare their man for every occasion.

He relies on them for so many things, including research on the issue to be presented, the make-up, attitude and mood of the targeted audience, create the best script for that audience.

Basically, very often it is not the content of the message that matters most but the manner in which it is packaged and delivered. That also includes a clear appreciation of the audience to whom it is delivered. Many people I have spoken to agree that the Prime Minister was not adequately prepared to face the kind of audience that he met at Southwark Cathedral last Saturday. At the risk of sounding elitist, with all due respect, the call of the PM is very relevant to certain segments of the Diaspora — the skilled and professionals — but not all and it would have been well-received and discussed sufficiently by that type of audience.

That call could therefore have been packaged and sold to an audience of that type and to be sure, it would have been warmly received and considered. I know that because I work with many Zimbabweans who have shown a critical interest in playing a role in rebuilding the country. They appreciate that when the Prime Minister calls for people to return home, it is not a literal call for people to pack their bags to return home instantly. They appreciate that this is language for re-engagement and that decisions are made as a matter of individual choice.

What the government needs to do is to respond to the interest of these people and collectively devise ways of facilitating skills utilisation which can be done in so many ways beyond physically returning home.

We know that there are so many ways because we are not the first country to produce a Diaspora. We do not have to re-invent the wheel; rather, we can learn from those who have been there before us —what they are doing to fully utilise the Diaspora resource.

Finally, contrary to some characterisation of the trip, I do not think it was a failure. I think it was the first tentative step toward re-engagement with the West, which is crucial. Mistakes were made, as in all things new and some things could have been said differently but perhaps one can appreciate that these perhaps overly positive words were made more in hope of achieving the right thing.

●Alex Magaisa is based at, Kent Law School, the University of Kent and can be contacted at [email protected] e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it     or [email protected]