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NGOs forced to work with Zanu PF structures
Nomalanga
Moyo, SW Radio Africa
October 17, 2013
http://www.swradioafrica.com/2013/10/17/ngos-forced-to-work-with-zanu-pf-structures/
Zanu-PF uses
memoranda’s of understanding to ensure that non-governmental
organisations do not have total autonomy when implementing programmes,
a Masvingo-based group said Thursday.
Zivanai Muzorodzi,
programmes manager at advocacy group Community
Tolerance Reconciliation and Development (COTRAD), said while
NGOs want to conduct their activities impartially, his experiences
in the Masvingo Province have shown that this is not always possible.
“Every
organisation that wants to implement a programme in the community
is made to sign a memorandum of understanding. This is a trick that
Zanu-PF uses to ensure that all NGOs follow lines of communication
crafted by the party.
“You find
that Zanu-PF gate-keepers are in charge of the whole structure from
provincial administration down to village level where they are in
charge of drawing up the list of eligibility.
“So by
signing an understanding, an NGO commits to operating within these
structures, and have to submit work plans which are monitored by
the ruling party’s people,” Muzorodzi said.
He said this
was true of all NGO activities, including humanitarian programmes
such as food relief.
Muzorodzi added:
“It doesn’t matter whether the source of the food items
is the government’s grain loan scheme or humanitarian organisations,
the distribution follows procedures spelt out by Zanu-PF and the
list of beneficiaries will reflect this.
“In Zaka
North for example where Zanu-PF chairperson Newton Mashiri, together
with the councillor for Ward 6, are in charge, some villagers have
been told that they will never make the list because of their MDC-T
membership.”
The COTRAD official
said recently another NGO, Mwenezi Development Trust, asked community
leaders to mobilise villagers and compile a list of those in need
of food aid.
“A well-known
Zanu-PF youth, Boniface Chingwendere, was given the task to do this
and in the end, the list that he came up with was party-based rather
than needs-based.
“NGOs
should know that political dynamics within these communities. Even
if they have to operate within Zanu-PF structures, it should be
possible for NGO staff to speak to villagers and families to determine
their levels of need rather than relying on lists provided by community
leaders,” Muzorodzi said.
He said by delegating
needs assessment to community leaders, NGOs were allowing Zanu-PF-aligned
headmen, councillors and chiefs to use food to further their political
interests.
Muzorodzi’s
comments come in the wake of recent reports from some villagers
in Lower Gweru who told SW Radio Africa last week that they were
being denied food aid donated by a humanitarian organisation.
The organisation,
the UN World Food Programme, denied the report Wednesday, adding
that it has strict monitoring mechanisms aimed at preventing partisan
food distribution.
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