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Tourism Minister Walter Mzembi on Hot Seat

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Transcript of an interview between SW Radio Africa‘s Violet Gonda and the Minister of Tourism  Walter Mzembi who is currently travelling with Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai on his world tour:

Broadcast: June 12, 2009

VIOLET GONDA: Walter Mzembi, the Zanu-PF Minister of Tourism is my guest on the programme Hot Seat. Welcome on the programme Mr. Mzembi.

WALTER MZEMBI: Thank you Violet.

GONDA Now you are part of the delegation travelling with the Prime Minister on re-engagement tour of western countries, what is your assessment of the trip so far?

MZEMBI: So far so good Violet, within the context of the parameters that have been set for us to re-engage the western bloc and the United States included. I think so far so good, it may not sound as good to other domains out there who have their own criteria on what we should achieve on this trip. I hear a lot of news around us moving around with a begging bowl to put $8. 3 billion in a kitty and that’s how other people are measuring us out there but I think so far so good within the context of the criteria we have set for ourselves and that has been set for us by government and cabinet.

GONDA: The State media, the Herald in particular, actually said that the Prime Minister was ordered to go and call for the lifting of sanctions and beg for financial assistance. Is this true?

MZEMBI: We are all sent by the President. Ultimately we are all deployed by the President, whether it’s the Prime Minister or is Mzembi or any other cabinet minister. At the end of the day we are all deployed by the Republic President and that is his Excellency, President Mugabe. On this delegation that we are embarking on and which we are part of, we are obviously headed by the Prime Minister who is incidentally is also the head of the council of ministers, he is also deployed by virtue of that deployment by his Excellency.

GONDA: And so what did the President  say? Did he say go to the western countries and ask for the removal of the sanctions?

MZEMBI: I was not privy to the debrief but what I know is that this trip that we embarked on was preceded by another engagement between his Excellency and Congressman Donald Payne of the United States Congress. And in that interaction, three hour interaction between our President and Congressman Payne, a copy of which I have in terms of minutes and what was discussed there, it is very clear what the President  wants us to achieve on this mission – is to begin to initiate the re-engagement process. And the President is an intellectual and a diplomat par excellence, he is obviously aware that this re-engagement process is not going to be an event, it is going to be a process. The process of revoking sanctions is not going to be an event as it is marketed in other public media in the country it is actually going to be a process. The process of repealing Acts is lengthy and can take anything up to two years and I’m sure the President is obviously very conscious of what we are up against here. It is not a political event, it is not an economic event, it is a process.

GONDA: So what has been the reception, how have you been received?

MZEMBI: Depending on which stakeholder you are meeting, it has ranged from outright scepticism to full optimism about the developments in the country. So it depends which group you are meeting. Let me just run you through the Washington power matrix as I have observed it here – you have four pillars in the Washington power matrix – the Executive itself which is anchored by Whitehouse, President  Obama, you have Capitol Hill, you have Congress and Senate and other players, the State. You have the influence peddlers, your opinion makers – in them you also include two very key institutes in the United States of America – the National Democrat Institute and the International Republic Institute. These are think tanks for the Democratic Party and the Republican Party respectively and obviously policy is evolved at party level and when you win elections you take it through into state craft, into the State itself, so these think tanks are very critical in our engagements and we’ve already engaged them.

You have elements of civic society, you have a whole range of civic society in this country who inform opinion, who inform influence on Capitol Hill and on the Executive. You’ve got the fourth estate itself, the media. You can’t imagine the whole matrix of media in this country, I think there maybe up to 500 radio stations in this country and an equal number of newspapers and in the first instance before any, and television media of course, before anyone does anything in the morning they watch news, they read newspapers and that is what informs opinion including that of the Executive in Capitol Hill.

So in deciding the strategy, you’ve got to take all these four blocks into account and say how do you start your game plan and obviously we have started with the influence peddlers, the opinion makers and that was our entry point and going forward beginning to create media hype around what we are doing here into Capitol Hill itself and right through to the Executive where we expect to meet President Barack Obama. So it is not as simplistic as it is put across to the nation by our public media and private media back home or in the dreaming capacity of our people to say that everything’s possible and can be done as an event. It is going to be a process and I want to psyche Zimbabweans to a fairly lengthy process in achieving our objectives.

GONDA: Now you are from Zanu-PF which has been under isolation for several years and so what is their perception of Zanu-PF, these groups that you have been meeting?

MZEMBI: In the first instance they are really, I can see an element of surprise each time I am introduced. Of course we have been quite open about how we should approach things, we are trying to showcase the inclusive government here, it’s not just Zanu-PF here, it is also Mutambara’s party as represented by Priscilla, sister Priscilla Misihairabwi-Mushonga and you’ve got Elton Mangoma there also representing the MDC-T but the head of delegation is the Prime Minister who obviously is not visiting the United States of America as an opposition leader, he is visiting the United States on this mission as a Prime Minister of a government of inclusivity and this is what we have been trying to disabuse the American nation here and the various stakeholders that we are meeting – that Prime Minister Tsvangirai is not visiting the United States as an opposition leader, he is visiting the United States as the head of the Council of Ministers, the Prime Minister of the republic of Zimbabwe and therefore debate and what we discuss must take a particular path which reflects that there’s senior government employee who is visiting the United States of America.

GONDA: But how do they perceive Zanu-PF?

MZEMBI: They perceive us obviously as anti-reformers I must be very, very honest. That’s how they see us and in various engagements that I have had with various state players here and influence makers, they perceive us as anti-reformers, as people who belong to the past, people who are being dragged screaming and kicking to implement certain outstanding issues of the GPA. I’m just putting it as I’ve heard it here and obviously my position here is to correct that assertion within the context of what I think is being done by the political players and by the government of Zimbabwe and by the cabinet of Zimbabwe which is the supreme policy making body. So I’ve been very upfront with you, that is how we are perceived…

GONDA: So don’t you think that perception is justified?


MZEMBI:
It is certainly not justified because if we are anti-reform, we wouldn’t have got this far. We are in an inclusive government because we are reformers; we are in an inclusive government because we have also embraced change. Change is no longer a partisan agenda and I have told right up to Secretary of State, Madam Clinton herself that change in Zimbabwe is not necessarily a partisan agenda any more as in the context of the MDC having actually come into the inclusive government on the back of the changed agenda. It is now a national agenda and to the extent that we embrace it and we begin to compete around making sure that we effect change in the various spheres. To that extent we become also relevant within the Zimbabwean political landscape. A battery of reforms that are coming into the country, including the constitutional review itself is a change programme…

GONDA: But Mr Mzembi, sorry to interrupt you there, you are trying to sell the inclusivity of the coalition government but the MDC is on record as saying that there are some unresolved issues…

MZEMBI: Absolutely…

GONDA: …like the issue of the governor of the Reserve Bank, the Attorney General Tomana, and governors, the swearing in of Roy Bennett – what is your position as Zanu-PF on this?

MZEMBI: Let me tell you what I have told the American society here. I have told them that we are on an irrevocable path to change, that the inclusive government itself is the only game in town. There’s no other alternative to what is taking place, to the process that is taking place in the country today.  And going forward it is not going to be partisan change it is going to be generational transformation, it is going to be national change agenda items up to including the constitution itself which is our ultimate benchmark in terms of abstracting from the people of Zimbabwe how they want to be governed and going forward obviously leading to the holding of an election. These are benchmarks and beacons that we have set ourselves as all the three parties, as government and that is what we are communicating to the Americans.

They obviously are bringing up issues that are contained in old Acts, or irrelevant Acts like ZEDERA which speaks on conditions that must be fulfilled before legitimacy is restored to any government in the Republic of Zimbabwe and we are pre-empting it by citing the provisions of the GP agreement itself which is an agreement, a conclusive agreement between the three parties and it speaks on the same conditions, 90% of which have been agreed. I don’t deny that we have outstanding issues and I’ve not denied it here but I’ve also indicated that those issues are being dealt with, dealt with by the right people, the Principals to the GP agreement are the ones who should persist with the GPA issues…

GONDA: But why is it that government has done very little to meet these conditions even in areas where there is no need for international support like in areas like media reform. Why is that taking so long?

MZEMBI: Why did it take so long for example to confirm permanent secretaries – it’s because we have to bring everyone on board to understand how a permanent secretary for example is appointed. And it’s a matter of people understanding the processes and the qualifications that belie anybody who will be one day called a permanent secretary and when it was understood, you saw that it was endorsed with the amicable collusion of all parties so sometime it’s issues that are done ahead of the level of understanding of other parties on what issues are involved.

Going to the issue of the Reserve Bank and other people that you have referred to, we’ve been very clear here to the extent that we can allow debate in Zimbabwe to degenerate around personalities then we lose sight of institutional reform. So what we must target ahead of us is institutional reform and say to ourselves – a Reserve Bank of the future – how do we want to see it, how do we want to see the last bank, the bank of last resort in the future? What sort of responsibilities do we want to give it and quite clearly there’s no departure point between the Reserve Bank and finance ministry in Zimbabwe on the need to reform the Reserve Bank but if we degenerate to the extent where we begin to discuss personalities then we lose sight of institutional reforms. And they agreed with us here, that they have existed as a nation, as a democracy on the back of very solid foundations in terms of institutional frameworks and structures and in their history, in their road map to where they are today. They’ve had good leaders and bad leaders but they’ve always been crosschecked by a strong institutional framework and foundation so I’m not going to be sucked into a debate where we discuss personalities and I’ve put it up front here and in cabinet that we must focus on the institutional and scientific issues and this is institutional reform that I am alluding to.

GONDA: But on the issue of the Reserve Bank governor, Gideon Gono, I actually understand that cabinet has approved the establishment of the multi-donor trust fund for Zimbabwe and this is going to be within the ministry of finance

MZEMBI: Yes.

GONDA: … and I understand that’s in an effort to remove concerns by western countries that financial aid to the country could be misused. But the question that I wanted to find out is going around the RBZ, like what is happening with this trust fund, doesn’t it mean creating parallel structures and doesn’t this have the potential of breeding corruption?

MZEMBI: No, no you can’t be saying reform an institution and at the same time not creating an instrument that insures business as usual approach. The country cannot stop ticking because we are reforming the Reserve Bank – so the multi-donor trust fund is certainly a parallel process which we don’t want to last for a period longer than necessary. It is a transitional framework to accept donor funds and aid into the country. It does not in any way substitute the Reserve Bank. The Reserve Bank ultimately will continue to be the treasury of the country, it will continue to exercise its function on monetary policy, the governor of the Reserve Bank in the future will continue to be the ultimate authority of that institution and that’s best practice everywhere. But don’t see the personality in the institution; just see institutional reforms and what needs to be done in terms of the reforms that we are pursuing.

GONDA: But isn’t that a bit difficult not to see the personalities because the MDC in particular has said that the reason why they are targeting someone like Gideon Gono is because of the issues of bad policies and corruption. So don’t you think that is important and isn’t this the reason why the international community has been saying we want to see a change especially in this matter?

MZEMBI: Well they have repeated that call here in every meeting I can tell you that but we are very careful to separate emotive issues from scientific and institutional issues – otherwise it would derail our discussions, if we are looking for funding and we begin to create conditions for ourselves that inhibit that funding then we will be shooting ourselves in the foot. I didn’t fly ten thousand miles all the way from Zimbabwe to come and discuss a personality here in another democracy. What we are pursuing here are models of financing, models of institutional governance and they’ve understood that, you can pursue it yes, but it’s not a prime debate here at the moment. What is prime debate here is institutional reform.

GONDA: You also mentioned that what’s needed in terms of the change agenda is generational transformation, what do you mean by that?

MZEMBI: Well there’s no doubt about that the fact that every generation speaks to its own brief. There was a generation of liberators who laid a very strong foundation for that country in terms of establishing the various freedoms, all the access of freedoms in the country and it would be impertinent to continue to judge that generation on the performance of the economy. Their brief was very clear, they were bringing universal franchise – the ability for you to vote freely every five years, to speak freely as much as we are doing, you and me today, the ability to universally enfranchise every Zimbabwean in the country. Their brief was to deliver land which has been done.
Don’t interrogate me on the matters and processes, but the outcome has been achieved, so that is their brief. Going forward, what is Mzembi’s brief and his generation – is to create economic prosperity for Zimbabwe, is to begin to design scientific models that ride on the back of those our natural resources and other freedoms that we are trying to consolidate for the benefit of all Zimbabweans.

GONDA: But why can’t you be interrogated on the methods and processes because how do you… (interrupted)

MZEMBI: Because we agreed in the Global Political Agreement that the land reform is fait accompli, there’s collusion and convergence by all the three political parties, in fact I urge you to read the GPA document itself. It doesn’t dispute the need for land reform. What it further wants to integrate is the productivity aspect. I can engage you on that very easily to interrogate scientific methods of ensuring food security in the country – starting and commencing with the land audit, a land audit that will bare everything for everyone to see who is owning more than one farm, who is not being productive, what kind of modelling should be put in place to ensure the timeous provision of inputs, crop finance, marketing, transportation of produce and so forth. That is the stage that we are in now, the scientific stage and that is the stage that we are riding on here in the United States and where we are going to say that we are appealing for support for our capacity utilisation programmes in agriculture, for our own productivity programmes in agriculture. We can’t be sucked into the debate prior to September 15 because September 15 concludes the land aspect through a provision that alludes to the need by all Zimbabweans to recognise that this is an irrevocable process. But going forward, how do we unlock value out of that land.

GONDA: And right now though, not going back as you said to the situation prior to September 2008 but as tourism minister, how do you intend to address the things that have caused our tourism statistics to plummet, such as the violence on white commercial farms without protection from the State?

MZEMBI: I don’t condone violence, in fact I’m a, I don’t condone violence at all, I’ve zero tolerance myself to violence. And if you recall, if you go back into the past in my constituency there was no violence at all in any campaign in the past and I’ve stood publicly against violence. I don’t condone it. I don’t think it’s a means to an end. But notwithstanding that, if there’s been issues around violence in the country on farms and in the political landscape this is why we have proffered and put ahead of us a national healing organ to bring to the fore those issues and to see how they can be resolved. But we have not proscribed how the national healing organ should work – we have simply deployed three ministers whom we have said they must go and suss out from the people of Zimbabwe how we must handle this issue of national healing and restoration and forgiveness and that is a work in progress right now.

GONDA: But why is the violence continuing?

MZEMBI: I’m not aware of where the violence is continuing. The Prime Minister here who is my head of my delegation was asked by various publics here on continued violence which was quoting even one of his own Ministers, Minister Sekai Holland, and he said he wasn’t aware of any escalation in violence. He was aware that we have residue elements within our society who continuously pop up here and there to regress the process of consolidating our, what we have set ahead of us as the targets for democratisation and stabilisation. And you can’t carry everyone 100% along with you. You have here and there people clinging on to the past and if that past is violence, you have a few people but the general momentum that pertains in the country is that of peace and stability and that is what we are marketing here and everyone agrees including Congressmen who have been to the country just as recently as last week, affirming that Zimbabwe is very peaceful.

We have less crime rate in the country, in Zimbabwe than even in South Africa which is hosting 2010 just next year. But the South Africans have taken a position and a resolve to say because they have a big showcase in soccer next year there are statistics that they should begin not to play too much rhetoric on in the national interest and quite simply, even ourselves we don’t have the violence that compares to the violence that you see in Iraq or in Afghanistan. So to that extent we must begin to manage our own political rhetoric, social rhetoric, economic rhetoric for the national interest.

GONDA: Now Mr Mzembi, the Zimbabwe Independent this week has a commentary saying that while you are travelling with the Prime Minister, the Lowveld conservancies are once again facing invasions and disruptions by thugs aligned to Zanu-PF and the paper went on to say, ‘Mzembi is unable to address this crisis because he is busy helping Tsvangirai claim that Zimbabwe is on the path of recovery. ’ How do you respond to that?

MZEMBI: In the first instance, my brief is very clear in the inclusive government. I am not the custodian of the environment and natural resources; it is under Minister Francis Nhema. I am responsible for the marketing of the product itself which is the wildlife on the conservancies and therefore those questions should be directed to the respectable Ministry and Minister to answer those issues because I’m away and I might not be aware of what is taking place. But I would not condone any type of disruption that will violate my product which I’m trying to market here and when I come back I will raise those issues with his Excellency and cabinet.

I can’t be sweating my back here to market a product that other people are undermining and I’ve been very upfront in the past on that.

GONDA: And you know there are hardly any black rhinos in the world today, but Zimbabwe actually lost about 120 black rhinos in just one year and this was through poaching and wildlife activists have said that Zanu-PF officials and army guys are actually organising these illegal activities. Now you say you are going around marketing this product, but how do you intend to stop this greed and the poaching?

MZEMBI: The greed is not an acceptable vice in any society so if you are describing it as greed it is not a virtue, it is not a value that we embrace or that any normal Zimbabwean should embrace in the future and we don’t want greedy people amongst us. We want competitive business people who exploit natural resources on a sustainable basis irrespective of party affiliation, race or creed. If it’s happening from my side and everyone has proof that it’s happening they must report them to the police. If they cannot get joy from the police then they must seek recourse to us and ultimately the last court of appeal is cabinet and the President himself.

So these issues must be brought forward, we don’t want them to be cyber-space issues, which are not matched by concrete evidence as to the happenings down there. I’ve engaged in the past, let me be upfront with you, the European Union ambassador in Zimbabwe,Xavier Marchal, and his team who are very, very passionate about wildlife as much as all these Europeans up here, are very passionate about wildlife – and I’ve made my position very clear as tourism minister that it is my product and I don’t accept and I won’t accept anyone undermining it. So to the extent that you are actually reporting to me that there is disruption, I will be making the first effort after this telephone interview to engage my counterpart on the custodian side of our brief – Minister Nhema and team to say what is happening, if there is any substance to what you are saying.

GONDA: How do you respond to people who say why should anyone go to Zimbabwe, when hotels are the most expensive in the region and they can have a nicer time in neighbouring countries like Zambia where there are no constant power cuts and they are not falling into potholes. How do you respond to that?

MZEMBI: Well we are in a transitional phase having come out of a battery of sanctions. By the way, there have been sanctions on Zimbabwe, I am just reading now the ZEDERA, the Zimbabwe democracy Act, just refreshing my memory on it before my meeting with the respective authorities here. There have been sanctions on Zimbabwe, they’ve admitted that there’s been sanctions imposed on the country, they’ve played a very negative part in terms of sprucing up our tourism product -because our hotel operators and players were not able to access funding from multi-lateral institutions, bi-lateral institutions because of the caveat which had been put on the ability of the American executives sitting on the IMF board and other institutions to exercise discretion on lending to Zimbabwe.

So sanctions are real here, I’m telling you. I would not be forecasting a two year period to reverse everything that has been done here if there were no sanctions. So we must accept that there have been sanctions and the Global Political Agreement accepts that there’s been a scourge of sanctions on Zimbabwe and going forward, how do we resolve this and this is why we are here on this lobby mission.

GONDA: But Mr Mzembi, western countries say that the restrictive measures are there as a result of human rights abuses, corruption and electoral fraud, so don’t you think that as Zanu-PF, you are partly to blame for this?

MZEMBI: I think we as Zimbabweans have been partly to blame for this. We have collectively been party to what we find ourselves in at the moment and this is why, to secure and seek a solution to the problem, it did not take one party to resolve this matter, it took the collective effort of the three parties to agree on what is wrong in the country which has been cited in the GPA and what is needed to be done in going forward, which has also been cited in the GPA and has been given by extension, legal effect in constitution amendment number 19. So I’m not going to accept any assertion that MDC was wrong, or Zanu-PF was wrong. We have all been collectively wrong, that’s why to seek a solution, we had to collectively sit round a table to resolve this problem.

GONDA: But how can you say all Zimbabweans have been collectively wrong, even the MDC, when the MDC has said it has been brutalised as a party for the last ten years by Zanu-PF which has stolen elections year after year?

MZEMBI: There’s nothing to respond to because what I am focussing my brief on is the future. The future which acknowledges that there have been past wrongs committed by Zimbabwean against Zimbabwean, by brother against brother, by sister against sister and that is acknowledged. It is acknowledged by the inclusive government actually setting up a national healing organ. It means there is acknowledgement that there have been past misgivings and wrongs against each other. Now resolving them, going forward, that’s why we have put three ministers of state from each party to come up with a framework and formulae on how we can nationally heal ourselves. So that debate, why don’t we wait for it until we get the framework for national healing by going forward.

At a political level, we have agreed that there is a need to go out and run through all the capitals of the world to market our GPA, to market the inclusive government and to begin to appeal for assistance in a more solid way not just humanitarian plus support but sustainable support which secures our food security, which sends our children back to school, which opens public health institutions, which begins to connect city to city, rural centre to rural centre through a viable transport network and road network in the country and that’s what I  am faced with here in this country, in the United States and we have been very upfront, my sister, with all these issues with the respective officials and state craft people here in this country.

GONDA: Talking about the future, what is your perception of Morgan Tsvangirai as a person and as a leader?

MZEMBI: Well he is a wonderful person, as you can imagine we have been all together since we left home. I’ve not seen anything that suggests he’s a monster. He also acknowledges that President  Mugabe is a wonderful person, full of niceties and good mannerisms. We, if you recall, we retreated to the Victoria Falls for three days under a World Bank sponsored bonding retreat, three days and those three days we relocated, located each other as a working government and we have been telling the Americans here that if you walked into our cabinet with President Mugabe chairing you would not be able to tell the difference between MDC and Zanu-PF. You simply can’t tell by walking in even if you were a fly, just flying in the cabinet room, you would not be able to tell who is Zanu-PF and MDC – because we are discussing issues.

We assist with issues on recovering the economy and giving promise and hope to the people of Zimbabwe. So there’s sufficient chemistry, there’s sufficient chemistry between Head of State and his Prime Minister. There’s sufficient chemistry between Prime Minister and his Minister on this trip, there’s sufficient chemistry to move us forward as a delegation. So as a person I’ve found him very well. As Prime Minister he has done an excellent job here, defending what we have done in the GPA, defending what we are doing as an inclusive government and projecting a future for the country.

GONDA: The reason I am asking that is there are some who believe that he is being used by Zanu-PF to go on a fund raising campaign, to bail Zanu-PF out and they use examples like what happened recently when the information minister Webster Shamu said that Mr Tsvangirai is not the President and has no authority to issue directives to ministers (regarding the case of the accreditation of journalists); and that Mr Tsvangirai had actually asked for a news crew to travel with him on his overseas trip and he was denied this…

MZEMBI: Violet, you’d be the last person to say that. Whether we have a news crew here or not, it does not undermine our work. In fact most of the meetings that we have gone into are very, very closed meetings which do not require news peddlers at all. They are sensitive, intimate meetings that are discussing the future of Zimbabwe and they are conducted primarily outside the glare of the press. The flamboyant and carnival atmosphere that people hope to capture around our visit here is not what we are seeking here. We are not seeking glory; we are seeking to recover the Zimbabwe economy. But not withstanding that, you’ll be the first one to agree that there’s a much more extensive media network here in the United States than in Zimbabwe and anyone who is seeking attention can get it here if he was seeking attention he would get it here, if I was seeking attention I would get it here because we have a plethora, an oversupply of global media here.

GONDA: But granted when the President is travelling, he travels with a news crew and I understand that the ZBC chief executive officer Happison Muchechetere actually said only the President is entitled to travel with a news crew and also on the issue of Mr Shamu actually saying that Mr Tsvangirai has no authority to issue directives to ministers, what do you say about that?

MZEMBI: I’m not going to comment on what other ministers are saying about their portfolios. It is their interpretation of what is policy in their own ministries but let me say to you that if we are seeking attention of the fourth state, we are actually in the haven of the fourth estate, the United States of America. And whatever we do here can be covered at the instant of a moment and projected and sold the whole world over within an instant, within seconds. So we are not seeking glory here, we are not seeking media in this country. We are working, we are on a working trip and when you are working you don’t work by standing on top of a mountain and say come and see me I am now working. That’s not what we are seeking here.

GONDA: You are the first Zanu-PF official to travel with the Prime Minister…

MZEMBI: Yes.

GONDA: … from a different party, especially on his inaugural trip. How were you selected to go and how did a Tourism Minister wind up on this trip and not another Zanu-PF person with a more substantial ministry?

MZEMBI: I am here with cabinet authority from the President of the Republic of Zimbabwe, his Excellency Comrade Mugabe. He’s the one who approves these trips, so he is the one who has deployed me here with the Prime Minister of Zimbabwe, Richard Morgan Tsvangirai as the head of delegation so that debate is misplaced. It is the debate of shallow minds. I’m hearing that – through various telephone calls that I get here from kumusha and online news – it is a debate that is in the minds of very, very shallow people in my country who seek to press self-destructive buttons all the time at the expense of the national interest.

Mzembi does not deploy himself on missions. Mzembi is tourism minister as you say and he is here because the value chain on investment starts with at his station. So the value chain is in this order – just listen carefully – you first visit, then you trade, then you invest – that is a value chain. And I am a public relations officer of that government. My job is to invite people, to entice them to come, I’m the catalytic effect of any economic turnaround programme and my functions are located quite adequately, elaborately and literally in the context of the short term emergency recovery programme, that Mzembi is one of the three pillars of the economic turnaround with his sector, with the tourism sector because it’s a low hanging fruit. But we have some very shallow minds in my country there across the party divide who think that Mzembi lobbies himself onto a trip like this. I was deployed by the President of that country, Comrade Mugabe.

GONDA: Some observers actually say that this trip could be politically damaging for you, in your party because you are being viewed as one of the few progressive elements in Zanu-PF. What do you say about that?

MZEMBI: If I’m progressive, that’s a very good brand. It’s a very good brand to be called progressive at a time like this in this country. I’m making history together with the other cabinet people in President  Mugabe’s cabinet, we are making history and history will record us as men and women who lost a lot of nights trying to make sure that this economy recovers – who lost a lot of family time, three weeks of family time away from my family which I love very much to pursue and push agenda and agendas on behalf of the nation state, on behalf of the national interest.

So I’m not going to stop moving because there are a few people barking and who want to stop a goods train. This programme that we are embarking on is a programme that has detractors across the party divide but it has very little critical mass in the country, maybe five per cent or so of the people you are alluding to out of the entire nation do speak like that. But they do speak like that because they are not part of this trip. If they were part of this trip they would be busy working so I’m not going to pay attention to people who have nothing else to do than to walk the streets of Harare looking and pursuing negativities.

GONDA: What message are you going to take to your party, especially to the so-called hard-liners in your party?

MZEMBI: When I go to my party, and when I’m in my party I don’t see hard-liners. I hear about them, they are like a myth, like a spirit, a bad spirit. Anything that is hard is a bad spirit so I don’t see hardliners. I see a party that is trying to adjust itself to the inclusive government. I see a party trying to revive itself and its fortunes to fight the next elections and win elections. That’s what I see so when I get back, I’ll advise them on what they need to do to be a part of the future, not of the past.

GONDA: And of course, Zanu-PF has blamed the economic crisis on the sanctions but in your view is there anything that you think as a party you are to blame for?

MZEMBI: We are a party that should move with the times. We are a party that is now 46 years old. My age, and a 46 year old party must always adapt to changes within its environment if it doesn’t it obviously will be like a dinosaur, it will perish. So we must adapt to the environment, to the changes in the environment and continue to exist. I would regret very much this party if it were to disappear with the disappearance of the liberators. It must be a party that we must ride on as a generation of the future and leave it also to our own children. The Republican Party, the Democratic Party in this country is as old as the constitution of the United States of America. I want to see a Zanu-PF that outlives its leadership into the future and becomes an institution that other future generations can ride on, ride on its ideals and its founding principles which I think are very good and that’s why I belong there.

GONDA: You talked about generational transformation, does that include when it comes to the succession battle in Zanu-PF?

MZEMBI: Of course, we want to see renewal of leadership going forward and renewal is not removing Mugabe. Renewal is bottom up. If you are not able to renew yourself bottom up, then you are finished. This is what I am talking about. It is generational transformation at cell level, at branch, at district, at province and going forward. But we want also and I’m telling you this at the bottom of my heart, that the President  of the republic who is the President  of my party, part of his legacy obviously should be to leave an intact party that we can ride on, all of us in the future as leaders. So that’s why we keep on insisting that he has unfinished business in the party to make sure that it survives the current turbulence and turmoil in the country and leave us a stable party that can produce its own leaders going forward and I’ll be one of them in the future. There’ll be others to come after me and others to come after those that come after me as well so that’s the generational aspect that I’m talking about.

GONDA: Mr Walter Mzembi thank you very much for participating on the programme Hot Seat.

MZEMBI: Thank you Violet.

Feedback can be sent to violet@swradioafrica. com

Ex-Q accused of bashing wife

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By Blackmore Mavura

EX-Q, one of the country’s most consistent and talented urban grooves artiste, has been accused of abusing his wife — Irene Munhenga (nee Office). Ex Q (real name Enoch Munhenga) is well- known for his Loverman alter ego, flamboyant lifestyle and laid-back vocals.

When contacted for comment, Ex-Q could neither deny or confirm the allegations, but blamed his “enemies” for trying to tarnish his image.

“We have problems, like any other family but to say I bashed her is too much “mabasa evavengi avo vari kuramba vachiwanda; asi hameno ngavataure zvavo zvavanoda (It’s the work of my enemies who are increasing but let them say whatever they want about me),” said Ex Q.

The alleged abuse is said to have reached “alarming levels” and residents at Spencer Cooke Gardens in the Avenues area are accusing Ex Q of disturbing their peace by constantly causing mayhem at the place.

In a recent incident, Ex Q allegedly beat up his wife in pugilist fashion a fortnight ago in front of his “screaming and pleading” two-year-old son, Trey.

According to a reliable source, Ex Q beat up Irene after she had asked him for her share of proceeds from the sale of the family car, which the dapper rapper is said to have insisted be sold so he could get some capital to start a business.

Ex Q was reportedly not amused by the questioning, which he felt was more of a nag and, according to the sources, that’s when all hell broke loose.

He allegedly started pummeling his wife with clenched fists, pulling her long hair and proceeded to kick her with snickered feet.

“We tried to enter their flat to stop the violence, but the door was locked so we just stood by hearing him (Ex Q) shouting obscenities whilst beating his wife, who was repeatedly asking for mercy and crying out aloud.

“What was heartbreaking was hearing their son pleading with his father to stop the violence,” said the source.

“We became aware that something was wrong when we heard Trey crying “Mhamha mukai, mhamha mukai! (Mummy, wake up!” repeatedly until his voice became hoarse.

“There was nothing we could do, as the door was locked and there is a screen at the front.”

Irene is said to have passed out in the apartment toilet.

“We feared the worst as she is always on the receiving end and after what seemed like an eternity we were relieved when Irene regained consciousness.

“But she told us she didn’t remember anything and she was complaining of cold feet.

“We had no option but to call her sister who had a tough time carrying her to her car as she could hardly walk and was all bruises. She took her away for treatment.

“The sad thing is that Irene loves Ex Q and she refuses to report the beatings to the police,” said the source.

When contacted for comment Ex Q could neither deny or confirm the allegations but blamed his “enemies” for trying to tarnish his image.

“We have problems, like any other family but to say I bashed her is too much “mabasa evavengi avo vari kuramba vachiwanda” asi hameno ngavataure zvavo zvavanoda (It’s the work of my enemies who are increasing but let them say whatever they want about me),” said Ex Q.

The source cited a previous incident in which Ex Q allegedly beat up Irene when she confronted him on why he had lied that he had flown to South Africa on business when his passport had been stamped at the Beitbridge border post.

“He was left at the airport and Irene was under the impression that he had flown but when he came back his passport showed he had gone by road and when he was asked he became violent and beat her.

“We are all afraid of this man and also he is arrogant.

“When you want to talk sense to him anotaura chando (he’s abusive),” said the source. – The Herald.

Tsvangirai outwits Mugabe

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By Denford Magora

Robert “The Solution” Mugabe has been played thoroughly by Morgan Tsvangirai during the PM’s visits abroad. JOC appears to have cottoned on to this, but the depth of the Prime Minister’s strategy in tackling Mugabe is now very clear.

Here’s the Prime Minister’s game plan. I have alluded to it before in an article on this blog:

Morgan Tsvangirai still has the weapon of the economy, just Mugabe still retains brute force (through the Generals etc) as his weapon.

Although the two are in government, they are stalking each other. Mugabe uses his brute force weapon to intimidate his opponents, including the Prime Minister. He eggs his people on as they behave atrociously, as if there is no GNU in place at all. In essence, although he carries the title, ZANU PF is trying to make sure that Tsvangirai is PM only in name. They are blocking him from real power.

This they are able to do because of the weapon of brute force, which is unchallenged in this country. Tsvangirai and the MDC-T have now decided to also bring out their own weapon.

They are saying, basically: “If you will not fire Gono, whom no one in the world trusts to handle any aid money, if you will not fire the Attorney General who is imprisoning our supporters, if you will allow Service Chiefs to challenge the authority of this government to the detriment of the MDC-T, then we will continue wielding our weapon, the economy.”

As was discussed by JOC recently, it is now clear that, behind the scenes, the Prime Minister is encouraging the world to hold off on helping Zimbabwe. He is telling them that they can not invest now nor can they bring in aid money for government and for reconstruction because Mugabe is still not sincere about sharing power, despite the public utterances from him.

Frankly, I do not blame Tsvangirai. He is right and he has no choice. Were he to suceed in opening doors for aid and grants and credit lines at this very moment, he would have lost out tremendously.

He knows very well that he still has no power in government. That it is possible for Mugabe to grab that aid, say thank you very much and turn on his coalition partners. Once Tsvangirai delivers that aid, he will be of no use to Mugabe and ZANU PF. They need him now because they want those sanctions and closed credit lines reopened.

Tsvangirai knows this. So this is now a fight for supremacy. Mugabe pretends like he is powerless over the Service Chiefs and “hardliners”. Tsvangirai pretends the West just will not listen to his pleas for aid and reconstruction assistance. Privately, he must be saying: “Waifunga kuti wakangwara Mugabe?! (You thought you were clever, Mugabe?!!

Tsvangirai has to do this. It is the only card he still has, really. If he gives it away, that’s it, Mugabe gets to keep everything, Zimbabwe will be awash with donor funds and the false prosperity of the 1980s will be back with us for a bit.

But Tsvangirai will then be discarded, because the economy has always been Mugabe’s biggest headache, his Achilles Heel. If Tsvangirai sorted it out for him without securing his own power and future, then that will be the end of the story.

Now we should watch and see how long it takes Mugabe to revert back to type and turn on Tsvangirai. This he will do. The lack of funds coming will frustrate him and Tsvangirai will be sitting there, smiling, insisting that he is in government to stay, he is not going to go anywhere.

Mugabe will have to eject him, which will be a a breach of the GPA so naked that no nation in Africa will support Mugabe.

Kirsty Coventry beats old rival to win

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Zimbabwe’s Kirsty Coventry vanquished an old rival and held off a new challenger to win the women’s 400 medley, then followed up with a victory in the 100m backstroke at the Santa Clara Invitational in the US.

Coventry, who won a gold and three silver medals at last year’s Beijing Olympics, set a meet record of 4 minutes, 32.15 seconds to win the 400m individual medley by nearly four seconds over Dagny Knutson, who is considered among the best of the next generation of US swimmers.

Knutson’s time was a personal best of 4:36.02, more than a second faster than fellow American Elizabeth Beisel.

Australia’s Stephanie Rice, who set the world record in winning gold over Coventry in the event at the Beijing Games was fourth in 4:38.08.

Rice, who won three golds in Beijing, recently completed a three-week high-altitude training program and said before the meeting that she was still tired and not yet in top form.

Coventry’s convincing victory in the medley and her backstroke victory, showed that she again will be one of the top medal contenders at this summer’s world championships in Rome.

The Santa Clara grand prix meeting, which concludes Sunday, is her last big competition before next month’s world event.

“This is definitely a good self-confidence booster. It felt good,” Coventry said. “Now we have another five weeks of hard training.”

Leisel Jones, an Australian who is a six-time Olympic medalist, pulled away at the end to win the women’s 100 breaststroke in 1:07.11. Jones, who broke her own meet record while winning the 200 breaststroke on Friday night, is skipping the world championships this summer to focus on her beauty school studies back home in Australia.

In other races, Japan’s Masayuki Kishida won the men’s 100 butterfly and American Ryan Lochte, the Olympic gold medallist and world record-holder, won the 200m backstroke. American Nathan Adrian won the 50 free.

American Dana Vollmer won her third individual gold medal of the meet in the 200 freestyle. She won the 100 freestyle and the 100 butterfly on Friday. – AFP.

Obama pledges aid for Zimbabwe

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President Barack Obama has announced $73m (£44m) in aid for Zimbabwe.

The US president was speaking at the White House in Washington, where he met the visiting Zimbabwe Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai.

Mr Obama said he wanted to encourage the rule of law, human rights and basic health and education in Zimbabwe.

Mr Tsvangirai – who entered a power-sharing agreement with President Robert Mugabe in February – is on an international tour to seek aid.

President Obama said he had “extraordinary admiration for the courage and tenacity” shown by Mr Tsvangirai, the leader of the former opposition Movement for Democratic Change in Zimbabwe.

Contrast with Mugabe

The US president said the power-sharing coalition in Zimbabwe was showing promise, following what he termed the “very dark and difficult” period the country had been through.

Correspondents say the warm welcome given to Mr Tsvangirai is in sharp contrast to the attitude towards President Mugabe, who is the subject of a travel ban and assets freeze by the United States and European Union.

Earlier, Zimbabwean Finance Minister Tendai Biti said the country’s economy could grow by between 4% and 6% this year.

Mr Biti said steps would be taken to restrict central bank activities such as borrowing and that Zimbabwe was coping with a lack of foreign aid.

The Zimbabwe economy has been battered by years of hyperinflation.

Mr Biti was speaking at the World Economic Forum on Africa in Cape Town.

“I think we will be able to achieve a growth rate of at least 6%, although conservatively it will be 4% in 2009,” he told journalists.

Zimbabwe’s economy has been shrinking for years. It contracted by 6.1% in 2007, according to the International Monetary Fund.

The power-sharing government has said the country needs about $10bn (£6bn) to stabilise its economy. Story from BBC NEWS:

Tsvangirai rocked by niece farm-grab

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By Fred Bridgland and Jane Fields

A RICH niece of Zimbabwe’s prime minister Morgan Tsvangirai, currently on a three-week tour of western countries to beg for aid to kick-start his country’s battered economy, has tried to take over a white-owned commercial farm by force.

Dr Erikana Chihombori, who owns a lucrative medical practice in the United States and has citizenship there, tried to seize Bertie Cremer’s 60-hectare flower farm near Chegutu, 60 miles east of Harare, but the young land invaders she hired withdrew after complaining they were being paid too little.

She insists she has letters from the Zimbabwean government permitting her to expropriate Mr Cremer’s De Rus Farm, which has been owned by his family for 81 years. She also says she has a right to the land, and that her takeover will help “correct historical injustices”.

The attempted land grab by Dr Chihombori, who was born in Zimbabwe, is potentially hugely damaging to Mr Tsvangirai and to his efforts to secure western aid, as he seems to be complicit, at least by association, in her attempt to take the property.

Yesterday, he met President Barack Obama in Washington to ask the US to help him and Zimbabwe without assisting powerful president Robert Mugabe.

Mr Obama, along with leaders of other western democracies, has said he wants reforms to the rule of law and human rights in Zimbabwe and an end to farm invasions before the US considers resuming financial aid.

Mr Tsvangirai, who entered a power-sharing agreement with Mr Mugabe in February, was with Dr Chihombori at the inauguration ceremony of new South African head of state Jacob Zuma on 9 May in Pretoria. They were photographed together on the VIP red carpet.

The relationship between them is far from clear. Mr Tsvangirai, 57, told the US ambassador to Zimbabwe before flying to Washington that he had no relationship of any kind with Dr Chihombori, 52. Then, after he left for Washington, Mr Tsvangirai’s spokesman said Dr Chihombori was his niece. “That is not in dispute,” he added.

But yesterday, junior officials in Mr Tsvangirai’s Movement for Democratic Change said he and Dr Chihombori had been meeting frequently in South Africa since his wife, Susan, died in a car crash in March.

In an interview this week with SW Radio, a former Zimbabwe-based station now operating from London and beaming into Zimbabwe, Dr Chihombori said she had been given an “offer letter” last December from the Zimbabwean government permitting her to seize Mr Cremer’s land and farmhouse. She said that “as a Zimbabwean citizen” she had “a right to land”.

However, she is, in fact, a US citizen and Zimbabwean law does not permit dual citizenship. It is, therefore, a mystery as to how she obtained the necessary “offer letter” from the government permitting her to take De Rus Farm.

Asked on the radio show if it was right to “steal” someone else’s property, she replied that Zimbabwe’s land redistribution programme was introduced to “correct historical injustices”.

She also told SW Radio’s Violet Gonda that she had withdrawn the farm case from court “for the time being”. She insisted this was not down to pressure from Mr Tsvangirai but because of the way Mr Cremer allegedly abused her sister and a land official when they visited De Rus Farm to take possession.

Dr Chihombori said: “At one point, Mr Cremer let his dog at them and started yelling at my sister, calling her a cold stupid kaffir (the highly abusive equivalent of ‘nigger’ in the US] and that he was not going to listen to any instructions from a kaffir.”

Last night, Mr Cremer’s wife Lena, asked to comment on the abuse allegation, told The Scotsman: “It is absolutely untrue that my husband verbally abused this woman or set the dogs on her. He never did. Besides, whites would never talk like that in this day.”

The farm, bought by Mr Cremer’s grandfather in 1928, was originally 716 hectares. As a result of land reform, more than 650 hectares were given to black “settlers” in 2002.– Scotsman.

Authoritarianism undermines the family

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By Mutsa Murenje

in Nairobi, Kenya

A closer look at and critical analysis of the family shows beyond argument that the family is the natural and fundamental group unit of society entitled to protection by society and the State. For we all know, don’t we, that the family is the custodian of morals and traditional values recognised by the community. What gives me heartache, however, is the fact that authoritarian regimes undermine the beautiful institution of the family and this shall be the subject under discussion in this, my humble contribution. A lot shall surely be shown in the paragraphs that follow.

Fighting Mugabe’s authoritarianism in Zimbabwe during the past decade or so has been a project of surpassing difficulty for many families. The road to the Biblical land of Canaan has not been very easy. I remember reading the late Professor Masipula Sithole’s essay, ‘Tasks of a democratic opposition’ in which he wrote that: “….authoritarianism is a pathology against which humanity has a tendency to always rebel.” In trying to rebel against Mugabe’s dictatorship, the following are but some of the true stories that have taken place in Zimbabwe.

I know of well-learned and beautiful young women who, upon completion of their studies and because of the economic collapse of the country, left their noble professions to join the despised and unpopular profession of prostitution to eke out a living. They are foraging for greener pastures because the State is ‘bankrupt’ or is it corrupt, and has nothing to offer them although they also happen to be the very people with the very potential to turn around the rotten economy of Zimbabwe. And I wonder if at all these people will found their own families. If they were to do that, will they be good parents Mr. President?

And yet I also know of unemployed young men who have become pundit criminals because the rotten regime of Robert Mugabe could not provide them with employment. These young people have lost their inherent dignity and they need it restored soonest. For I know, as you also know, that investing in this generation of present as well as future national, regional and international leaders has huge payoffs especially when taking into cognizance the critical fact that these, unlike the older generation, have a lifetime of potential productivity ahead of them.

The question is: Will our leadership restore their dignity, when and how? Let’s not forget that these have fallen behind due to especially difficult circumstances brought about by the tyrannical despot, Robert Mugabe, and his unpopular regime. Restoring their dignity therefore is fundamentally important in that it helps them to rebuild their future which has a long-term beneficial effect on society as a whole.

Need I say more? Why not? I know of caring and loving husbands who, because of dictatorship in Zimbabwe, have been wrongly blamed for ‘abandoning’ their wives and children and driving them into poverty when they left Zimbabwe for ‘greener pastures’ in South Africa and other neighbouring nations. Some of them entered into marriages of convenience, (am sure some of my colleagues from University will remember them as juntado unions as we learnt in our Social Anthropology course!), when they got the rude shock that not all pastures are green. This has had a devastating impact on their marriages back home.

Some have eventually returned empty-handed and are ill and they expect their suffering wives to take care of them. What do these wives have to take care of their husbands when they are also in extremely difficult circumstances? They have virtually nothing! What about husbands and wives who have not returned? What happened to their families because of your dictatorship Mr. President?

And yet friends and faithful followers of the dictator are already asking: Is he blaming the right person? Shouldn’t he be talking about the “illegal sanctions” imposed on us by Britain and her allies? My response to them is: I know Robert Mugabe as the president of Zimbabwe who has led it since independence in 1980, and as the chief architect of the 1980s slaughter of 20,000 Matebele people. Not only that, Mugabe’s administration is corrupt, incompetent and its primary concern is political repression and cronyism that has ultimately led to the economic collapse of the country.

What then is the way forward? There is an imperative need to restore the dignity of the beautiful institution of the family. Let’s recognise the family as a school of deeper humanity; within which each member learns best what it means to be a human person. There, each member of the human family, from conception to natural death, experiences the gift of unconditional and enduring love. Thus each human person is carefully taught by the family to be responsible, to commit, to share, and to love.

My training on the philosophical foundations of the dignity of the human person at the World Youth Alliance-Africa, where I am currently undergoing the regional internship programme has brought to the fore that it is only within the beautiful institution of the family that children first come to understand their own intrinsic and inviolable human dignity (ubuntu/utu wa mtu). Through their complementary roles, mother and father, equal in dignity, show their children that the freedom of the human person is most fully and rightly lived in the gift of self (service to others).

True love freely received and given within the family is an image of the transcendent love that makes possible the fulfillment and completion of every human being. Restoring the dignity of the family therefore should be our top priority in this new political dispensation. This is so largely because the family sustains society as it gives life to the next generation. It also has the privilege of forming free and responsible citizens, thus securing democracy. As the fundamental unit of society, the family ensures the sustainability of civilization and culture. It takes on essential tasks in the care of all and especially the weakest and most vulnerable.

In finale, “…and I have fought against black domination. I have cherished the ideal of a democratic and free society in which all persons live together in harmony and with equal opportunities. It is an ideal which I hope to live for and to achieve. But if needs be, it is an ideal for which I am prepared to die” (Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela). How I wish these words would become second nature to us especially in view of our vigorous fight against dictatorship in Zimbabwe. I put it to you dear readers and I rest my case until next time. Be blessed.

Latest Premier Soccer League Table

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This is the latest Zimbabwe Premiership log as updated on the 13th of June 2009.

13june

Dynamos Thomas Sweswe joins Chiefs

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Dynamos midfield defender Thomas Sweswe has shocked the club by signing a three-year contract with the South African Premier League’s Kaizer Chiefs. Besides Dynamos, Sweswe has previously played for Highlanders, Mwana Africa, and Manning Rangers of South Africa.

Fellow Zimbabwe Warriors team member and Kaizer Chiefs midfielder Tinashe Nengomasha told VOA’s Studio 7 for Zimbabwe that he welcomes Sweswe’s recruitment, which fills a midfield gap for the team.

Kaizer Chiefs have meanwhile also confirmed the acquisition of much-talked about Pretoria University midfielder-cum-striker Mthokozisi Yende.

“We have great pleasure to announce that we have agreed on terms with Mthokozisi and his team Pretoria University, to acquire his services. The onus is now with ‘Tuks’ legal team to finalize due processes with regards to the signing of the contracts and agreements,” said Chiefs Football Manager, Bobby Motaung.

He added: “A need also arose for us to ensure that we reinforce our defence material for next season. We have subsequently secured a three-year contract with a central defender, Thomas Sweswe from Zimbabwe whose international track record speaks for itself. We are confident that his loads of experience will ensure that we have a water-tight defence line-up next season.”

Both players have agreed to sign three-year deals with ‘Amakhosi’. Motaung also revealed that the club has released defender Mokete Tsotetsi to Bloemfontein Celtic.

“Mokete has a bright future ahead of him. He is a player with loads of potential and we believe he has made his mark with the team and will continue to do the same at Celtic,” said Motaung.

“On behalf of the Kaizer Chiefs family, I would like to thank him for his contribution to the team. He has demonstrated a very good professional behaviour at Chiefs. We also would like to wish him success in his new club,” concluded Motaung.

Open letter to Robson Sharuko

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By Mugrade wekwa Goredema

Dear Robson Sharuko

Last week in the Sunday Mail Charles Mhlauri wrote criticing ZIFA for playing friendlies with Oman. On Thursday you then carried a story defending your corrupt friend ZIFA “THIEF EXECUTIVE”, Henrietta Rushwaya. Today`s Saturday Herald has the same article defending shambolic ZIFA simply because Rushwaya is your friend who takes you on free foreign trips with the national team in return for good coverage.

Listen my friend, not everybody is a fool, Who are Oman in  world football, who are Bahrain ?? Even though you talk of rankings why cant Zifa arrange to play, Netherlands, Argentina, or Portugal if your partner in thiefing Rushwaya is competent. Mhlauri is right and no amount of wasting space in the Herald attacking him will help.

By the way who elected Rushwaya into office? Hand picked by Vice President Joseph Msika even though she has no JC (Junior School Certificate)? Is she not the same person who stole Zifa money for other officials allowances some time ago? Why didnt you report it with vigour the same way you did with Jonathan Mashingaidze? By the way Mashingaidze was cleared and is back at ZIFA… why didn’t you apologise?

Not everybody is daft to think Oman are a good football side, you even know it? If Mhlauri says the truth about Rushwaya`s incomptence, why can’t you accept? Anyway since she takes you on free foreign trips to Oman, Bahrain when the mickey mouse games are arranged, only a fool would expect you to denounce the wrongs Rushwaya did?

By the way are you stealing defrauding ZIFA with Rushwaya? On foreign trips you over invoice Zifa and claim Rushwaya`s sister paid with her credit card in the United Kingdom then Zifa reimburse you two exorbitant money which you falsely claim in expenses even though the host nation (Oman) pays all bills.

You are a discredited journalist who  never went to a proper school to sharpen his skills , no wonder you are so biased, a shame, a muppet, a loser, a corrupt, a phony, dull, thick individual who thinks you know all, and take advantage since not many newspapers report daily on football in Zimbabwe.

What has stopped you criticizing ZIFA? Remember you sent Rafiq Khan to prison, lied over Mashingaidze and he was suspended, what has stopped you criticising Rushwaya… you want to tell everybody she is a god……UTTER RUBBISH…the more you realise you cant fool everybody the better, but being thick and daft as you are you think simply because the Herald is the only daily newspaper you can get away with lies, abuse of the pen and pure hypocrisy?

By the way your other hero , whom you use as a tool in your agenda against Charles Mhlauri, Moses Chunga behaved like a baby at Rufaro and remonstrated against Lovemore Banda, when are you going to tell us about him?

You had the guts to inform us Mhlauri had a domestic altercation with his wife some years ago… How about Chunga who behaved like a dull grade zero in front of the cameras at Rufaro…

Go to school, munhu wepi , sports editor ane kaDiploma kemass communication keku border gezi …. taught by Tafataona Mahoso… you mentioned Pathisani Moyo… why cant you tell the whole world she was humiliated by Rushwaya whilst you sat stone quiet on that flight from Malawi ? After another free foreign trip paid for you by your master Rushwaya

Ndaenda ini
Mugrade & wekwaGoredema.