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Behind
the Headlines with Roy Bennett
Lance Guma, SW Radio Africa
October 21, 2010
On Behind the
Headlines SW Radio Africa journalist Lance Guma speaks to MDC Treasurer
General Roy Bennett. Almost 20 months ago he was nominated by his
party to be the Deputy Agriculture Minister but Mugabe's regime
have simply refused to have him sworn into the post. Lance finds
out why the saga will not end? Does he think it was a mistake for
the MDC to join the coalition government? What are his views on
the diamond industry and alleged infighting within the MDC?
Lance
Guma: Good evening Zimbabwe you are listening to Behind
the Headlines. My guest this week is the MDC Treasurer General Roy
Bennett. Almost 20 months ago he was nominated by his party as the
deputy agriculture minister but with the political soap opera that
is Zimbabwe, Mugabe the man who lost the last credible elections
has refused to swear him in citing a dubious court case in which
Roy was eventually acquitted. Roy, thank you for joining us on the
programme.
Roy
Bennett: Pleasure, thank you Lance.
Guma:
Now the High Court acquitted you on charges of terrorism, banditry
and insurgency. The entire world heard Mugabe tell CNN you would
be sworn in to government once you were acquitted,
why hasn't this happened?
Bennett:
Lance I think for reasons known to the military junta ruling Zimbabwe.
I think Mugabe is a senile old man, he no longer has control of
events in Zimbabwe and the military junta, that forced him into
the run-off and committed the atrocities throughout the length and
breadth of Zimbabwe to secure the false election of Mugabe in the
so-called president run-off, call the shots and basically as far
as they are concerned they don't want me sworn in because
any form of admission to anything from the MDC reflects upon the
people as a transfer of power and that's one of the issues.
Guma:
Now in September we reported on complaints from your lawyer, Beatrice
Mtetwa who revealed that plainclothes policemen visited several
properties owned by you. The next we heard was that the judge who
cleared you, Justice Chinembiri Bhunu was claiming
you defamed him. What was that all about?
Bennett: That's an absolute load of rubbish
Lance. As far as I understand it and from what I've seen from
the documents sent to me by Beatrice is that the Zimbabwe Guardian
which is an internet, one of these internet ZANU PF sites I am alleged
to have made a statement to them. I have never spoken to them in
my life and it's around that statement that Justice Bhunu
is suing me. (Bennett is alleged to have said the judge hearing
the case was compromised and he would not get a fair trial.)
Guma: Now there has been speculation over why of
all the ministers appointed by Tsvangirai you became the one the
regime chose to target, is this a race issue? Is it Justice Minister
Patrick Chinamasa still harbouring bitterness because you pushed
him in parliament all those years ago? What is it?
Bennett: It's the deep-seated racism within
and inside ZANU PF and Mugabe. It's also the deep-seated hatred
of honesty and transparency. They don't want anything that
will expose the truth of what has taken place with inside the agricultural
ministry in Zimbabwe and with inside the government whilst ZANU
PF were ruling and when they brought it to the knees before the
MDC went into the Global Political Agreement to give people hope
again and to give them food in the shelves and to give them a currency
that operates.
Guma: Let's say hypothetically you had been
sworn in as deputy agriculture minister, what are some of the issues
you would have wanted to see addressed?
Bennett: Well I think the first thing you need to
address is the production of agriculture, the timely access to inputs
for legitimate agriculturists and growers across the length and
breadth of Zimbabwe. I think it is vital that that is addressed
initially and then to expose the total corrupt patronage that has
taken place or the totally skewed political handout of farms and
farming equipment to the political elite that has never even touched
the people in Zimbabwe.
Guma: Do you think having said that the agriculture
ministry was a very sensitive area for them and they would not have
wanted a former commercial farmer like yourself in the ministry?
Bennett: Absolutely, well they wouldn't have
wanted anybody who would have exposed any form of truth of what's
taken place, of the vast quantities of farm equipment, massive combine
harvesters and tractors lying in the yards of Patrick Chinamasa
and Joseph Made in Headlands, in warehouses in Harare where there's
masses of equipment that was acquired through the Reserve Bank,
Gideon Gono, where they just used state funds and allocated them
to political individuals. Obviously they don't want that exposed
and they don't want that brought to the public eye.
Guma: You spoke earlier on Roy about hardliners
in ZANU PF, a lot of people feel it's an argument that gets
Mugabe off the hook because they wouldn't get away with what
they're doing if they didn't have his consent.
Bennett: Well I don't think it's got
anything to do with his consent at all. I think it's to do
with the ruling military junta and I think it's your Sidney
Sekeramayi, your Emerson Mnangagwa and then the military generals
around appointments in the securocracy, plus you know the Brigadier
General Sangos of this world that are controlling the whole process
of what happens in Zimbabwe.
Guma: So do you believe Mugabe has simply become
a figurehead in the power matrix?
Bennett: Absolutely, you watch an interview where
he stays awake for more than 20 to 30 minutes without falling asleep.
He's an old man, he's way past his time, and it's
basically these people that are driving the process and he's
the figurehead to legitimise that junta.
Guma: Now two weeks ago Tsvangirai addressed a press
conference at which he basically stood up to Mugabe and his unilateral
appointments of governors, judges and ambassadors. Was it a case
of the PM finally doing the right thing because people were beginning
to think he was getting too comfortable with Mugabe?
Bennett:
Well I think all along the prime minister has been very strong on
the fact that the Global
Political Agreement needs to be implemented to the letter and
the word and I think the unilateral appointment again shows the
hand of the military junta because Mugabe would be meeting with
the PM assuring him of things and yet behind the scenes there's
a completely different scenario developing and therefore the unilateral
appointments that have taken place over time outside the Global
Political Agreement and outside SADC's endorsement.
If we look back Lance, and we look back at the last
SADC Summit it was clearly a resolution that came out of that SADC
Summit that the governors would be appointed to the letter and the
word of the Global Political Agreement under the formula agreed
in that Agreement and SADC pushed that issue. Not only has Mugabe
totally ignored the letter and word of the Global Political Agreement
he has totally dismissed SADC as a nothing and gone ahead with these
unilateral appointments.
Guma: Do you think the standoff over the appointments,
where has that left the coalition government because technically
it seems the arrangement is dead, there's no good will, Mugabe
is doing as he pleases, the state media have accelerated their hate
speech and the constitutional outreach basically has showed the
violent DNA of ZANU PF? Is there a government to talk of as things
stand?
Bennett: Well there's the Global Political
Agreement arrangement that stands and of course that government
is in existence and must remain there as is towards election and
the focus is now on elections. You will see that Mugabe has now
come out and announced the fact of elections, MDC is ready to meet
those dates of elections and basically all that needs to be ensured
now is that there's an absence of state interference in those
elections and an absence of violence and there's a history
that's taken us to this Global Political Agreement that SADC
have underwritten and that SADC are basically responsible for.
And that is a violence-free election where the people
of Zimbabwe are able to choose a government of their choice. And
therein lies the challenge Lance as to whether SADC, the African
Union and the world at large are going to sit by and watch another
violent election take place, another unleashing of state apparatus
upon innocent people of Zimbabwe who wish to enter into an election
and vote in a government of their own choice.
Guma: Do you not think maybe the MDC has relied
too much on SADC and to some extent the African Union when over
the years it's been proven these regional blocs will always
support Mugabe no matter what?
Bennett: I don't think that's quite
correct Lance, I don't think that's quite correct at
all. SADC is a body of which Zimbabwe is part of and the MDC are
part of SADC, like it or not, that's where we are and unless
we have faith in our own institutions and unless we put trust in
our own African brothers nothing is going to come to the fore so
all of these things are a process.
You've got to go down the road to be able
to expose what's there and that's basically what the
MDC has done. What option did the MDC have other than to go into
this arrangement? To allow the country of Zimbabwe to implode? To
allow the people of Zimbabwe to suffer to a worse degree of what
they were suffering when this Global Political Agreement was signed?
The issues around the people of Zimbabwe, it's
around lives, it's around suffering and sure, you might not
have everything in your way but at least the MDC through the leadership
of the prime minister are trying to make sure that we go through
a democratic process in Zimbabwe that delivers the peoples'
will without violence and without huge suffering of the people.
Whether that will be avoided at the end of the day
or not, who knows Lance but let's just put it on record and
the evidence is there to see that the MDC have done everything in
their power to try and restore legitimacy to the Zimbabwean people,
to open the hand of friendship to Robert Mugabe and ZANU PF, to
the human rights abusers in Zimbabwe, the military who've
killed people unilaterally, two sets of ethnic cleansing, the ethnic
cleansing of Matabeleland and the 20,000 murders that took place
there in the '80's, the ethnic cleansing of the whites
on the pretext of land, these are issues that are severe human rights
abuses that have taken place.
Yet the MDC went into this government to offer a
hand of joining to build a country and make things better for the
average Zimbabwean and let's face it, things have got better
for the average Zimbabwean, enter the MDC into the Global Political
Agreement. But what the future holds, what other violence is going
to be unleashed and how it all ends up towards the suffering of
the Zimbabwean people, the MDC and Morgan Tsvangirai are on record
as having tried their best to make the best of a very bad situation,
to ease the suffering of the Zimbabwean people.
Guma: Now if I may move on to another subject, much
has been made in the media of alleged infighting within the MDC,
the media occasionally accuse the Secretary General Tendai Biti
of trying to unseat Tsvangirai as party leader. As somebody who's
inside the ranks of power in the MDC, is there any truth in these
reports?
Bennett: Well I think anybody who understands the
animal called ZANU PF, the intelligence organisation called the
CIO, its a mere fact that they are trying to create a further split
in the MDC, they are trying to create falsehoods in order to look
as if there's lack of unity in the MDC. We've just finished
a strategic meeting, there was a meeting in South Africa, I've
never seen the MDC more united and more focussed on its goal to
deliver for the people of Zimbabwe and basically what ZANU PF is
doing using the CIOs to try to hide behind its own divisions.
If we look at ZANU PF as it sits today you have
Brigadier General, the commander of the army Chiwenga as the blue
eyed boy, Rex Nhongo, Major, Brigadier General Mujuru having been
sidelined, pushed out the way. You have Emerson Mnangagwa and Sidney
Sekeramayi calling the political side of things and telling Mugabe
what to do with the support of the likes of Chiwenga, there's
massive infighting within ZANU PF and all is not well there so as
far as the MDC are concerned it's never been more united and
there's never been such a thing as infighting. It is the CIO
trying to portray something that's not there.
Guma: Do you think the party has been infiltrated
by moles or people of a dubious character who are working to undermine
the party? There's some suggestion some party officials are
becoming comfortable and getting trapped by the trappings of power,
posh cars, lots of money, corruption - is this setting into
the party?
Bennett: Most definitely not Lance. If you look
at, you'll always in every party anywhere in the world, have
opportunists and people that are in there to infiltrate and feed
back to he who pays the dollar so they'll always be there
but surely they're a very small minority and certainly have
absolutely no influence or say onto the political machinery of the
MDC.
You know the whole issue of the smart cars is one
that needs to be put to bed. When the MDC went into the Global Political
Agreement, all those vehicles had been purchased already by the
Reserve Bank governor, they are the property of the government of
Zimbabwe, they had nothing to do with the MDC, they were there.
There's no ways the government as it stands
today are going to sell those vehicles and if the MDC did not take
those vehicles and use them how are they to move around and what
were they to do? All those vehicles would go to ZANU PF so I think,
let's be fair on what the MDC have achieved and focus on what
they have done and moved for the people of Zimbabwe and forget about
petty issues about vehicles that were purchased by the ZANU PF regime
and certainly would never have been purchased by an MDC government.
Guma: Right let me move on to another issue which
I think is right up your alley - the discovery of diamonds
in the country. Instead of ushering in a new era of prosperity it's
become a curse with people in the military and others connected
to ZANU PF plundering the resource. Now your farm, Charleswood Estate
was taken from you several years ago and we hear diamonds have been
discovered there. I'd like to get your thoughts on the diamond
industry in Zimbabwe.
Bennett: Well again very sadly it's a game
of money and it's a game of corruption and it's a game
of the region, it's a game of South Africans involved with
corrupt ZANU PF officials around illegal concessions. If you have
a look at the Marange Concession where you have Mbada and Canadile,
both those concessions are illegal, they were never signed off by
the minister of Economic Investment.
Those are illegal concessions and entry into foreigners
looting the wealth of the people of Zimbabwe is evident for everybody
to see. The real benefactors of the Marange diamonds should be the
Marange people. Instead of moving the people from Marange somewhere
else and allowing foreigners to come in and plunder the wealth of
Zimbabwe, that should belong and should be uplifting the community
of Marange and the same with the diamonds on Charleswood.
I mean had I still been the owner of Charleswood
and discovered those diamonds certainly they would have played a
major role in the upliftment of the Chimanimani community, of the
Ngorima and Chikuku communal lands and back to the people that live
in those areas and the nation in a greater good on a social agenda
by using the natural resources to empower people. Instead you have
Russians mining in conjunction with ZANU PF heavyweights, looting
what basically belongs to the Zimbabwean people.
Guma: Do you think the MDC could have done more
within government to highlight some of these things because there's
a feeling they've been slightly quiet and not as vociferous
in exposing most of these things?
Bennett: Well I think they have been speaking out
but it's just never been pushed out as far as the government's
concerned. I think we will see more and more as time goes by of
the MDC's part in government involved in exposing the total
illegality of those concessions and the fact that the people of
Zimbabwe are being denied their natural resources.
The MDC has talked about nationalising those mines
and handing them back to the people with credible developers coming
in and moving them in that way so the MDC has come out and said
that and I'm sure that going down the road there will be more
involvement to expose that total farce.
Guma: And my final question for you Roy, you are
currently out of the country, you have a judge back in Zimbabwe
who's trying to have you charged for defaming him, you've
got CIOs, plain clothes policemen visiting your properties so we
do know where this is going. Will you be going back?
Bennett: I will. You know I rely on my leadership
and the decision that comes out of there Lance. I'm certainly
not going back to go to Zimbabwe, to go back to jail where I can
be ineffective in the position that I was chosen by the people so
it all depends on the whole political landscape moving forward,
we're going into an election and if my time is better served
outside the country travelling the nations of the world to raise
resources to fight the Mugabe regime, so be it, that's what
I will do. So I wait and will hear from my party who I am a member
of as to which is the best route that I should take.
Guma: Well Zimbabwe, that's the MDC Treasurer
General Roy Bennett. Just to remind you almost 20 months ago he
was nominated by his party as the deputy agriculture minister but
the political soap opera that is Zimbabwe, Mugabe has refused to
do so. Roy thank you so much for taking time to talk to us.
Bennett: Pleasure Lance, thank you very much.
Feedback can
be sent to lance@swradioafrica.com
or http://twitter.com/lanceguma
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