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Zimbabwe
Weekly Update - Number 6
Zimbabwe Democracy Now
February 15, 2010
http://www.zimbabwedemocracynow.com
Politics
- Jonathan Moyo was
passed over for promotion to the new Zanu-PF Politburo lineup.
The spin-doctor was hoping to become either information secretary
or to head the party's commissariat. The central committee
was reportedly wary of trusting political chameleon Moyo enough
to be part of the party's inner circle.
- The EU has decided
to extend targeted sanctions until 2011 against Mugabe and Zanu-PF
elite, official sources said in Brussels on Friday. The decision
was based on a "shortage of sufficient progress" in
the implementation of the GPA.
But the EU food security co-coordinator in Zimbabwe Pierre-Luc
Vanhaeverbeke said it would continue to support efforts to revive
Zimbabwe's economy and provide humanitarian assistance.
- The MDC announced
on Friday the inter-party talks on the GPA had reached a deadlock
and now required the intervention of SADC. MDC spokesperson Nelson
Chamisa said if the deadlock persists, the only solution is free
and fair elections.
- But the South African
mediation team contradicted this on Sunday, saying the coalition
parties were still in negotiations. President Jacob Zuma's
International Relations Adviser and team member Lindiwe Zulu said
they had successful meetings in Zimbabwe.
- Meanwhile a new report
released on Friday by the Civil Society Monitoring Mechanism (CISOMM)
said the unity government had not delivered on its promises, failing
to resolve the land dispute, transitional justice, human rights
and institutional reform. The report said the unity government
has instead become a "talk-shop".
- Amnesty
International (AI) on Wednesday called on the unity government
to fulfill its promise to reform state institutions, in a bid
to end continuing human rights abuses. AI said that without genuine
reform, the abuse would likely persist.
- President Robert Mugabe
has withdrawn a directive to ministers and permanent secretaries
to report to his deputies after protests by Prime Minister Morgan
Tsvangirai and his deputy Arthur Mutambara when they met last
Friday. The directive was made through a circular dated January
25 by the Chief Secretary to the President and Cabinet Misheck
Sibanda.
Governance
- The civil servants'
strike for a quadrupling of wages has reportedly been encouraged
by Zanu-PF. Off-duty officers in the armed forces and police were
ordered to join the demonstrations in civilian clothes. Zanu-PF
youths and soldiers allegedly raided several schools and government
institutions in Masvingo Province to enforce the strike. The MDC
has accused Zanu-PF of politicizing the strike in an effort to
wreck the fragile coalition government. The civil service is being
paid in US$, supplemented by donor funds to support essential
services, but these funds will not cover any increases. The civil
servants say that revenue from the Marange diamond fields should
be used to improve salaries and working conditions.
- Prison labour is
being exchanged for maize grain to feed inmates at Guruve Prison.
A senior prison officer said senior government officers and Zanu-PF
officials were using prisoners as 'slave' labour on
their farms in exchange for maize. The government is mandated
to provide food for prisoners.
- The government is
to review the salaries of top earning parastatal bosses in an
attempt to pacify the civil servants currently on strike. The
strike has exposed some utilities who pay their employees as much
as US$5 000 a month.
- The ongoing constitution-making
process has become illegitimate and confusing, National Constitutional
Assembly Chairperson Lovemore Madhuku said on Thursday. Madhuku
said the process was not "people-driven" as planned,
criticizing politicians for their "power-hungry motives."
- The Central Intelligence
Organisation (CIO) is reported to have purchased around 200 Nissan
twin cab trucks for as yet unexplained reasons. Observers say
the agency spent approximately US$5 million.
Business
- The new regulation
that requires businesses to hand over at least 51 per cent ownership
to indigenous Zimbabweans will be enforced from March 1, with
jail penalties of up to five years. Minister of Indigenisation
Saviour Kasukuwere said the regulation would not be reversed,
despite the MDC's call to withdraw the "destructive
policy." Tsvangirai allegedly said the gazette had been
made without his knowledge.
- Zimbabwe's
biggest international investment conference since the formation
of the unity government started in Harare. The Africa investor
(Ai) Pan-African Tourism and Infrastructure Investment Summit
runs until Thursday, with an aim to discuss tourism strategies,
investment opportunities and tourism infrastructure development
to help Zimbabwe benefit from the 2010 FIFA World Cup.
- The tourism sector
is projected to grow by 10 percent this year, underpinned by a
stimulus package, Tourism and Hospitality Minister Walter Mzembi
said on Friday. Mzembi said investment was crucial to growth.
Economy
- A project aimed at
alleviating the water in shortage in Bulawayo has finally started,
but the laying of the pipeline from the 99% full Mtshabezi Dam
is underfunded by more than US$18 million. Only 2km of pipeline
has been laid of the 33km needed to connect Mtshabezi to the city's
main supply dam, Ncema.
Agriculture
- The European Union
(EU) announced a US$13 million funding scheme to assist smallholder
communal farmers. Head of the EU Delegation in Zimbabwe Xavier
Marchal said the rehabilitation of the agricultural sector is
crucial to Zimbabwe's economic revival. The scheme will
run till 2012.
- A state newspaper
Manica Post said on Friday the government had allegedly banned
all food handouts by NGOs. The decision was announced by Agriculture
Minister Joseph Made, who said the main motivation was agricultural
rehabilitation.
- Local Government
minister Ignatius Chombo and Information minister Webster Shamu
are allegedly leasing out their farms to former white commercial
farmers, Mashonaland West secretary for lands and resettlement
Temba Mliswa said. Chombo and Shamu are reportedly part of a scam
involving senior Zanu-PF officials subletting more than 30 farms
in the province. Mliswa also said Chombo and Shamu were multiple-farm
owners.
- The Commercial Farmers
Union reported that 'at least' 16 judges have so far
benefited from the chaotic and violent land reforms.
- Zimbabwe's
commercial farmers will ask the SADC Tribunal to set guidelines
on 'fair compensation' due to farmers for land lost
under the land distribution programme. The Southern African Commercial
Farmers' Union (SACFA) supported the initiative.
Humanitarian
- US$500 million is
needed in food aid amid a serious drought that has hit the country.
Tsvangirai said a government response to the food shortage was
urgently needed. He said the government would have a mid-term
plan to import food by June or July.
Violence
- MDC transport manager
Pascal Gwezere, who was recently released after being abducted
from his home in October, said he was tortured while in custody.
He said his torturers were often drunk when interrogating him,
and used a variety of torture methods such as tying his genitals
with strong cotton thread and threatening to bury him alive.
Law
- Mugabe's war
veterans on Friday had a run in with riot police when they were
found digging up the Zimbabwe Ruins, allegedly to exhume remains
of bodies of fighters of the liberation struggle, which they said
had been buried there. The ruins are the most important historical
monument in the country and a prime tourist attraction in Masvingo.
- Two senior police
officers and an ex-policeman were last week arrested after they
were accused of violating the Official Secrets Act by leaking
police information to the MDC.
- The civil servants'
strike forced the postponement of Deputy Minister of Agriculture
(designate) Roy Bennett's treason trial. The trial was deferred
for the duration.
Media
- Distributors of UK-based
newspaper The Zimbabwean were arrested on Friday and charged with
publishing "falsehoods prejudicial to the state."
Media groups pointed out that distributors are not publishers
and have decried the charges, saying they demonstrate the coalition
government's insincerity about media reforms.
- A Mexican journalist
was arrested Friday while filming tourist facilities in southern
Zimbabwe. Tourism Minister Walter Mzembi said the unnamed journalist
had been cleared by the Zimbabwean government to film attractions
in Masvingo ahead of the FIFA World Cup.
- A three-member cabinet
team led by Vice-President John Nkomo has been tasked to summon
editors from the state and independent media to urgently discuss
'hate speech' in the media.
Diamonds
- The diamonds removed
from the Reserve Bank on the orders of Mines Minister Obert Mpofu
last week are still unaccounted for. The missing diamonds are
part of a collection that was mined by the UK based mining firm
Africa Consolidated Resources. "We don't know where
they (the diamonds) are," ACR's lawyer, Jonathan Samkange
said, "The police robbed the central bank."
- Zimbabwe's
House Committee on Mines warned government officials that they
risk being charged with corruption and sentenced to prison if
they keep mismanaging the Marange diamond fields.
- Two executives of
Canadile Miners, a South African mining firm, were arrested in
Zimbabwe on Tuesday on charges of stealing diamonds from Marange.
They were reportedly found with 57 diamonds worth R280 000. Canadile's
board members include diamond smugglers from the Congo and mercenaries
from Sierra Leone.
Health
- A four-member delegation
from Tanzania arrived in Zimbabwe on Sunday to study how the country
administers the Aids levy. Zimbabwe has used the National Aids
Trust Fund (NATF) - funded through a taxpayer levy in 2000
- to implement a successful campaign against the disease.
The National Aids Council which delivers services has in the past
been accused of holding on to funds. In Zimbabwe the treatment
gap is huge with only 180 000 of the 600 000 people in need of
ARVs accessing the life-saving drugs.
- Zimbabwe's
Health Minister Henry Madzorera on Tuesday acknowledged improvements
in the country's health delivery system but said it is still
in "high dependence unit" and would remain so until
the international community increased funding.
- Water Resources,
Development and Management minister Samuel Nkomo has accused two
mining companies and Zesa (the electricity supply utility) of
releasing toxic waste into a Hwange river, posing a serious health
hazard to villagers, livestock and wildlife. He said he would
continue to "monitor" the situation.
Diaspora
- Hundreds of Zimbabweans
were on Friday evicted from Chambers Building in Johannesburg
central after the property was deemed unsuitable for human occupancy.
The residents were left stranded after they were ordered to vacate
the property immediately.
- Refugee rights group
PASSOP said last week that Zimbabwean refugees in South Africa
are given "selective assistance" by organisations
meant to help them. The group's Braam Hanekom said the organisations,
funded or mandated by the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR),
have refused to help some Zimbabweans and acted "maliciously"
towards displaced Zimbabweans in De Doorns in the Western Cape.
Wildlife
- Zimbabwe could face
sanctions at the upcoming Convention on International Trade in
Endangered Species (CITES) conference in Qatar in March for its
failure to control poaching of wildlife, especially of the endangered
rhino, the Convention's secretary general Willem Wijnstekers
warned. Wijnstekers, in Harare after a fact-finding tour, also
charged that Zimbabwean security forces are spearheading poaching
of elephants and rhinos in the country.
- The Great Limpopo
Transfrontier Park Initiative joining Zimbabwe, Mozambique and
South African national parks is under threat as villagers illegally
living inside Zimbabwe's Gonarezhou National Park have vowed
to stay put, demanding compensation from Zanu-PF for broken promises.
At least 1000 families have accused Zanu-PF of abusing them for
political gain.
The Good News
- Nobody was arrested
when members of WOZA
and MOZA held their annual Valentine's Day march in Bulawayo
and Harare, distributing 'protest Valentine' cards
and red roses during the peaceful march.
- Zimbabwe's
biggest cell phone operator Econet Wireless is asking its more
than three million subscribers to help raise aid for the victims
of the Haiti earthquake. Subscribers wanting to help will donate
US$0.89 for every text message sent.
- The International
Organisation for Migration (IOM) last week donated communication
equipment to the government, in order to improve the response
to disease outbreaks in remote areas. The equipment will be used
to bridge the communication gap between rural health centres and
district hospitals.
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