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Coltart
in small minority of one as he refuses government Mercedes
Jan
Raath, The Times (UK)
April 03, 2009
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/africa/article6024469.ece
ALL but one of Zimbabwe's
ministers from the former opposition has accepted an official Mercedes
Benz.
When they were in opposition
MDC politicians condemned the profligacy of Mr Mugabe's Mercedes
Benz-mobilised Zanu PF party.
Last September,
when the agreement
to form a power-sharing Government was signed, senior MDC figures
made an informal decision never to accept an official Mercedes.
But it has now emerged
that all but one of the 20 new ministers, including Morgan Tsvangirai
and his two deputy prime ministers, is now making use of a $50,000
E280 model.
Eric Matinenga, a prominent
human rights advocate and now Constitutional Affairs Minister, said
he was "embarrassed" at his official Mercedes.
"It is a condition
of plenty amidst deprivation," he said. "But the reality
on the ground is there there is no other. You cannot get an alternative
— they become a convenient evil."
Another minister who
asked not to be named was surprised with the alacrity with which
they were offered their limousines. "There was so much pressure
on me to go and get it. I argued with them for a long time,"
he said.
"Why were they
so keen to give me a fancy car that I didn't want? It really
looked like they wanted to tar us with their own dirty brush."
David Coltart, the new
Education Minister, told The Times that he had not been in his office
for 30 minutes on his first day in the job when a transport officer
burst in and told him to hurry down to the government vehicle pool
to collect his new Mercedes Benz.
"He said if didn't
come down now, someone else would get it," he said.
"I had just come
into a building with no running water and I was being offered a
Mercedes Benz. It was astonishing."
It was much the same
for the rest of the 20 cabinet ministers of the two MDC factions
on their first day at work — each told they now had a luxurious,
three-litre official Mercedes E280 available to them
Coltart, from the splinter
faction of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), was alone in
declining the use of the car.
The Mercedes Benz has
long been the symbol of sleaze and rapacity among Zimbabwe's
ruling elite under President Mugabe, who proclaims his supremacy
with a US$500,000 bombproof model S600L. As with the parasitic waBenzi
class in most of Africa, they bled the country's treasury
to be able to roar down potholed roads and past ordinary people
deprived of food, homes, medicine and education.
"The thing about
driving a Merc is that it is not just a different car — it
is a different planet. How can you be in touch with the people in
a Mercedes?" once senior MDC official, now a minister, asked
at the time.
Now the MDC has a dilemma,
faced with being tainted as just more of the same waBenzi clique.
Some officials claim it is a deliberate tactic by Mugabe's
bureaucrats to offload spare Mercedes limousines on to MDC ministers
and slowly "break the mould" of the factions'
image of incorruptibility.
According to Tendai Biti,
the MDC Finance Minister, the cars were bought by the Central Bank
a year ago but never distributed — "I have not bought
any cars for anyone," he said. "We either had to leave
them to rot or sell them, and get half their value. It was cheaper
to keep them. It was a matter of practicality."
Of the Mercedes allocated
to him, he said, "I don't like it. Half the time I use
a truck."
There are other reasons
to keep the cars: the state will only provide fuel, maintenance
and official registration to the Mercs and not to ministers'
private cars. And with an official salary of US$100 a month —
the same as all ranks in the civil service — and a housing
allowance paid in worthless Zimbabwean dollars, such costs are considerable.
Coltart, who uses a Nissan
Pathfinder 4X4, which he claims is half the price and will get him
to schools on appalling rural roads, said: "I made a pact
in 2006 never to be seen in one."
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