Nigerian Govt Speaks On Bomb At South African Embassy

Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed

Naija News|The Nigerian Government has on Saturday debunked the report of a bomb explosion at the South African High Commission in Abuja, Nigeria’s capital.

Naija News understands that the federal government while speaking on the alleged bomb explosion, maintained that the report suggesting the explosion was fake and was being orchestrated by “desperate opposition.”

The Nigerian government maintained that the fake news was being perpetrated by the opposition to cause panic and chaos among the populace.

The Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed made this known in a statement obtained by Naija News on Saturday in Abuja.

The Nigerian government in the statement by Mohammed said the video of the supposed bomb explosion being circulated on the social media, is that of the bomb explosion at Emab Plaza, near Banex, in Abuja on June 25, 2014.

Mohammed said in his statement that reads as thus; ”A pattern is emerging of the antics of the desperate opposition to latch on to the use of fake news and disinformation as a strategy to trigger chaos in the country. On Friday (6 Sept 2019), they doctored and circulated the video of my appearance on Channels Television in January 2015 (when I was the spokesman of the APC) to make it look like I was begging Nigerians to forgive President Buhari for not
having a school certificate.

“Worse still, they posted the video afresh, giving the impression it happened last Thursday and that I acted in my capacity as Minister of Information and Culture.

”Unfortunately for them, this doctored video came out on the same day a report emerged that the PDP had sent lawyers and party agents to the University of Cambridge to confirm the authenticity of the President’s West African school certificate, only to be stunned to discover that not only did the President write the examination, he also passed.

”One would have expected a party that trumpets its belief in the rule of law, a party that challenged the result of the last presidential election in court, to wait patiently for the impending judgement on the issue instead of engaging in underhand tactics and resorting to self help,” he said.

Mohammed warned the perpetrators of the spread of fake news to desist or be made to face the music. He furthered appealed to Nigerians to be very discerning and to endeavour to always verify the authenticity of the information they receive.

”This is just the beginning. Nigerians should expect an explosion of fake news and disinformation in the days and weeks ahead. This is because the desperation of this opposition is alarming. But their strategy will fail, just like every other dubious strategy that they have been employing in their desperate bid to grab power,” he said.

Obert Mpofu Slams Mutodi On Unacceptable Comments

Obert Mpofu

Zanu-PF secretary for administration Obert Mpofu accused deputy information minister Energy Mutodi of stoking tribal hatred in Zimbabwe after appearing to suggest Ndebeles are South Africans.

Mutodi was earlier this week forced to delete a video in which critics said he made comments questioning the nationhood of the minority Ndebele people from western Zimbabwe.

“You will find that here in Zimbabwe, if you didn’t know, just about 1836 we accommodated thousands of South Africans who came into Zimbabwe fleeing from (King) Shaka, and they were being led by Mzilikazi,” Mutodi said in the video, which he later withdrew saying he had been “misunderstood”.

Mpofu, speaking at a Zanu-PF event in Bulawayo to review the indigenisation and economic empowerment policy, said Mutodi’s utterances were “unacceptable”.

Said Mpofu: “There are certain statements by certain leaders which are unacceptable to the party. There was a recent statement where somebody was saying there are three million South Africans in Zimbabwe.

“That’s a totally unacceptable, misdirected statement which is not from Zanu-PF. You see what’s happening in South Africa (xenophobia), it’s because of such reckless statements.”

Mutodi deleted his video, insisting that he had been misunderstood. The comments had been made in the ongoing anti-foreigner attacks in South Africa.

“My tweet saying about three million Zimbabweans were of South African descent has riled some Zimbabweans. The tweet has been misunderstood, giving political capital to the opposition. I wish to withdraw the tweet and unreservedly issue my apologies to whoever was affected,” Mutodi tweeted on Wednesday.

Manyika: If Death Expunges Bad Deeds, What Is Our Incentive To Reform?

By Dr. Noah Manyika| In the final scene of “The Godfather” trilogy, Michael Corleone, the once feared head of the most powerful organized crime family in the world who ordered the deaths of many of his foes including his own brother Fredo, dies alone in the courtyard of a run-down home, his ultimate encounter with the Grim Reaper witnessed only by a not-so-healthy dog sniffing around for some food. 

It’s one of life’s terrible tragedies that powerful men who were once admired but lose their way never seem able to learn not just from such fictional but true-to-life stories, but from the real lessons of history that things rarely end well for those who brutalize their own people and abuse power. Robert Mugabe is hardly the first erstwhile national hero turned despot who died a bitter, lonely and tormented old man.

Sadly he will not be the last.

I read the message announcing Mugabe’s demise attributed to President Emmerson Mnangagwa this morning and could not help but wonder what this moment says to him and those who run our country now. Does this represent the final triumph for the Lacoste faction and their military backers to put their own brutal and ruinous stamp on the history of our country free of Mugabe’s shadow, or is this a moment that will make them change their ways and do the right thing?

At such moments, many of our people will choose to be charitable because speaking truth about the dead is supposedly “disrespecting the dead.” We are in this terrible mess in our country partly because our “culture” makes it difficult to speak truth to power. Its supposedly “unAfrican” (kushaya Hunhu/Ubuntu) and uncultured to speak truth to or about one’s elders and those in authority whether they are dead or alive! It is one of the tragic reasons we are often unable to solve family, community and national problems.

I am always puzzled by some of the things we choose to define us as Africans, and specifically why in order to prove the moral superiority of our culture, death has to expunge anyone’s bad deeds.

If this is indeed our culture, it would have to apply to everybody. If death absolves all bad deeds, then what would our incentive to reform while we are still living be? Why would we even bother fighting against the evil living?

If they will simply find redemption in death, if once they die we will simply absolve them in the name of Ubuntu and “Tsika Dzedu,” then the wizards and witches in our villages, and those who deny us our freedom, abduct, beat and kill the innocent (and that includes the monsters currently murdering other Africans in xenophobic attacks in South Africa) might just as well continue doing what they do.

It’s tempting to attempt to redeem Robert Mugabe’s legacy in order to make Emmerson Mnangagwa look worse. No one’s death can retroactively change history. Both men and their company are responsible for the current state of our country. The only difference is that one still has the opportunity to go a different way. The other one doesn’t.

I believe in honest grieving that does not devalue the tremendous pain caused by those who were once admired. I mourn the legacy of shame they leave their families and the nation.

I mourn out of frustration that a life once full of great promise could end in such an inglorious way. I mourn that a freedom fighter would leave a legacy of such brutal repression and that his leadership legacy would be people like Energy Mutodi who believe that Ndebeles are South African foreigners.

I mourn that after four decades of championing the economic empowerment of Africans, he would leave behind a country whose economy is run by thugs and is in ruins, while over 72.5 percent of the population is trapped below the Poverty Datum Line.

I mourn that after the Manpower Planning Survey of the early 80s and investment in education which resulted in our country being one of the most literate on the African continent, he would leave behind hopeless generations of graduates and 90% unemployment.

I mourn that Zimbabweans and Africans desperate for a pan-African hero would be put in a situation of being needlessly conflicted about whether Robert Mugabe’s rightful place is in the pantheon of heroes, or a villain who must be consigned to an eternal hall of shame.

It is my prayer that we would all be able to draw the right lessons from the lives of the departed and choose the right way.

Is There Not a Cause?

It’s one of life’s terrible tragedies that powerful men who were once admired but lose their way never seem able to learn not just from such fictional but true-to-life stories, but from the real lessons of history that things rarely end well for those who brutalize their own people and abuse power. Robert Mugabe is hardly the first erstwhile national hero turned despot who died a bitter, lonely and tormented old man.

Sadly he will not be the last.

I read the message announcing Mugabe’s demise attributed to President Emmerson Mnangagwa this morning and could not help but wonder what this moment says to him and those who run our country now. Does this represent the final triumph for the Lacoste faction and their military backers to put their own brutal and ruinous stamp on the history of our country free of Mugabe’s shadow, or is this a moment that will make them change their ways and do the right thing?

At such moments, many of our people will choose to be charitable because speaking truth about the dead is supposedly “disrespecting the dead.” We are in this terrible mess in our country partly because our “culture” makes it difficult to speak truth to power. Its supposedly “unAfrican” (kushaya Hunhu/Ubuntu) and uncultured to speak truth to or about one’s elders and those in authority whether they are dead or alive! It is one of the tragic reasons we are often unable to solve family, community and national problems.

I am always puzzled by some of the things we choose to define us as Africans, and specifically why in order to prove the moral superiority of our culture, death has to expunge anyone’s bad deeds.

If this is indeed our culture, it would have to apply to everybody. If death absolves all bad deeds, then what would our incentive to reform while we are still living be? Why would we even bother fighting against the evil living?

If they will simply find redemption in death, if once they die we will simply absolve them in the name of Ubuntu and “Tsika Dzedu,” then the wizards and witches in our villages, and those who deny us our freedom, abduct, beat and kill the innocent (and that includes the monsters currently murdering other Africans in xenophobic attacks in South Africa) might just as well continue doing what they do.

It’s tempting to attempt to redeem Robert Mugabe’s legacy in order to make Emmerson Mnangagwa look worse. No one’s death can retroactively change history. Both men and their company are responsible for the current state of our country. The only difference is that one still has the opportunity to go a different way. The other one doesn’t.

I believe in honest grieving that does not devalue the tremendous pain caused by those who were once admired. I mourn the legacy of shame they leave their families and the nation.

I mourn out of frustration that a life once full of great promise could end in such an inglorious way. I mourn that a freedom fighter would leave a legacy of such brutal repression and that his leadership legacy would be people like Energy Mutodi who believe that Ndebeles are South African foreigners.

I mourn that after four decades of championing the economic empowerment of Africans, he would leave behind a country whose economy is run by thugs and is in ruins, while over 72.5 percent of the population is trapped below the Poverty Datum Line.

I mourn that after the Manpower Planning Survey of the early 80s and investment in education which resulted in our country being one of the most literate on the African continent, he would leave behind hopeless generations of graduates and 90% unemployment.

I mourn that Zimbabweans and Africans desperate for a pan-African hero would be put in a situation of being needlessly conflicted about whether Robert Mugabe’s rightful place is in the pantheon of heroes, or a villain who must be consigned to an eternal hall of shame.

It is my prayer that we would all be able to draw the right lessons from the lives of the departed and choose the right way.

Is There Not a Cause?

Cathy Buckle: Robert Mugabe The End of An Era

Dear Family and Friends,
The end of an era in Zimbabwe’s history has come. Robert Mugabe died in Singapore on 6 September 2019 aged 95. Ironically he did not die in his own country which he ruled for 38 years or in a Zimbabwean government hospital where doctors are on strike and where hospital staff were last week reprimanded at Chitungwiza Hospital for eating patients’ food. He did not die in a Zimbabwean hospital where patients must pay cash upfront for everything from medicines, splints, bandages, syringes and needles to drips, injections, anaesthetists, specialists and surgery.

Robert Mugabe 21 February 1924 – 6 September 2019.
Prime Minister and President of Zimbabwe April 1980 – 21 November 2017.

17 April 1980 on the eve of Zimbabwe’s Independence, Robert Mugabe said: “An evil remains an evil whether practiced by white against black or by black against white. Our majority rule could easily turn into inhuman rule if we oppressed, persecuted or harassed those who do not look or think like the majority of us. Democracy is never mob-rule.”

About the massacre of 20,000 people in Matabeleand by the 5th Brigade of the Zimbabwean army between 1983 and 1987, Robert Mugabe said:” it was a moment of madness.

2000: Referring to white Zimbabweans during the invasions of commercial farms by Zanu PF supporters and war veterans: “You are now our enemies because you really have behaved as enemies of Zimbabwe. We are full of anger. Our entire community is angry and that is why we now have the war veterans seizing land.”

2006 on the arrest and torture of fifteen trade union activists in Zimbabwe: “Some are crying that they were beaten. Yes you will be thoroughly beaten. When the police say move you move. If you don’t move, you invite the police to use force.”

2008 in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe: “Only God who appointed me will remove me, not the MDC, not the British.”

2010 in Zimbabwe about gays and lesbians: “Worse than pigs and dogs… Those who do it, we will say, they are wayward. It is just madness, insanity.”

Cathy Buckle, Zimbabwe. 6 September 2019. www.cathybuckle.co.zw

Known For Its Hard Handedness, ZRP Launches Degree In Policing

Comm-Gen Matanga

State Media |POLICE Staff College has launched a Bachelor of Adult Education (Honours) degree in Police Studies, a programme that is aimed at fully capacitating officers in the fight against crime. The four-year degree programme will be run in conjunction with the University of Zimbabwe.

Addressing the gathering at the launch of the programme in Harare yesterday, Police Commissioner-General Godwin Matanga said education was key in the police service’s transformation drive.

“As ZRP we have seen it prudent to exploit education as one of the avenues to attain the anticipated transformation,” he said.

“The importance and relevance of this programme can never be over-emphasised in the realm of policing. As the custodians of law and order in the country, we remain committed to strengthening our collaboration with local and international institutions of higher education, with the aim of strengthening and safeguarding the security of our country, as well as effectively responding to emerging criminal trends.”

Com-General Matanga said the police service’s dream was to establish a police university which offers more degree programmes.

“Our broader aim is not only to have a police university in the near future, but to also expand programmes being offered, including increasing enrolment,” he said.

Comm-Gen Matanga called on senior officers to continuously partake in research that seeks to transform and tackle challenges confronting policing.

The degree programme, which has already commenced with 40 students, is covering subjects such as customer services, human rights and policing, criminology, peace and conflict studies, understanding society and ethics in policing and principles in training in policing, among others.

UZ Dean of Faculty of Education Dr Oswell Hapanyengwi said the four-year degree programme will mould students to become reputable public models for the betterment of the ZRP and society.

“It is my strong conviction that the programme will produce graduates who are able to offer solutions to the teething challenges of the 21st century policing landscape,” he said.

ZRP Staff College acting principal Assistant Commissioner Charles Musavengana said the students were going to be equipped with relevant knowledge of interpreting, as well as providing a conducive environment for the fulfilment of the government’s vision of transforming Zimbabwe into an upper middle income economy by 2030.

Senior police officers and several stakeholders attended the launch.

Zimbabweans Eat And Merry Like Nothing Happened On Day Mugabe Died

A day after ex-strongman and founding leader Robert Mugabe died, the only clear sign that Zimbabwe was in mourning were flags flying at half mast.

While Mugabe is hailed for having led Zimbabwe to independence, some people blame him for having wrecked the country's economy

The streets and shops were packed, weddings and parties went ahead as planned. Most people were going about their usual business, trying to eke out living.

For while Mugabe is hailed for having led Zimbabwe to independence, for many Zimbabweans he is also the man who wrecked their economy, leaving them to live with the consequences.

Commuter mini bus driver More Kondo, 30, was busy decanting petrol from a large jerrycan into a smaller container to share with a fellow driver.

“If it were another leader, right now this country should have shut down to mourn,” he said. “But he was an autocrat.

“Had he left power early and the country in a better shape, we would be celebrating his life and would have seriously shut down the country in honour of him.”

Mugabe died on Friday aged 95 at a Singapore hospital.

Lauded by some as liberator and for his uncompromising stance against the West, Mugabe led a controversial land-grab programme nearly two decades ago — seizing commercial farmland from whites.

This policy is widely blamed for having contributed to the collapse of the once-thriving economy.

Zimbabweans struggle daily to access basic services, while inflation hovers in triple digits. Many people on Saturday said they had more pressing needs to attend to than mourning.

“We not going to the funeral,” said Kondo shaking out remaining drops of petrol in the container that previously had engine oil. “We will be busy trying to make money, we are hungry.”

Fuel in Zimbabwe is in short supply and its price has been increased more than six times since the start of the year — as have prices for several other goods.

Another man, a 35-year-old engineering graduate who would only give his first name, Tonde, was equally unimpressed.

“I have a degree, I’m unemployed and hungry and you expect me to waste my time to go to his funeral? What, after 37 wasted years?

“He stole money and today he is gone,” he said.

‘He destroyed this country’

Along Kaguvi street, police officers set up their usual Saturday morning public interaction desks conducting surveys on the public’s views on policing.

People drew comparisons between Mugabe’s death and that of South Africa’s first black president and anti-apartheid icon Nelson Mandela, who died in 2013.

“When Mandela died, people went onto the streets, but look at him (Mugabe) — nothing.

“It doesn’t even look like there’s a death (of a former leader),” said 25-year-old auto-spares store keeper Munya Nhamo.

Mugabe, he said, had stolen the 2008 election from opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai. “If he had accepted defeat, the country would not be in such a bad shape”.

Ozias Mupeti, 55, stood over his small stall selling fresh ginger and a few packets of paprika and curry.

“He destroyed this country. Now he’s gone and we have nothing left … because of him,” he said angrily. “It’s painful.”

A few metres down the road, ice cream vendor and mother-of-three Tendai Marange, 42, expressed mixed feelings as she waited for customers.

“We are not respecting him (Mugabe) by continuing to work, but when the body arrives we will stop,” she said. “For now we have to work because life is tough these days.

“When Mugabe was there things were better…. if he wanted prices to drop, they would”.

State television carried extensive coverage of the death between the normal weekend programming, such as sports.

Patson Muparadzi was preparing to go to Mugabe’s village for the wake.

Sporting a white Zanu-PF t-shirt emblazoned with Mugabe’s portrait, he said: “We are maybe here at work, but we are grieving.

“We are working so we can raise money for fuel to go to Zvimba (Mugabe’s rural home),” said added.

Willy Salim, 39, a street forex dealer, also mourned Mugabe’s death.

“Darkness has engulfed our country. Zimbabwe will never be the same without Mugabe,” he said.

Man people in Harare were out working as normal Saturday, a day after the death of their former president
1/2 Man people in Harare were out working as normal Saturday, a day after the death of their former president
Some Zimbabweans paid tribute to Mugabe
2/2 Some Zimbabweans paid tribute to Mugabe

ZACC Phones Charlton Hwende On Vote Buying Issue

ZACC Chairperson Matanda Moyo

MDC Secretary-General Charlton Hwende says the Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission has indicated that it wants to investigate an allegation of vote-buying involving the Minister of Health Obadiah Moyo in the lupane by-election held this year.

Said Hwende, “Today when I was travelling to the Airport I received a phone call from the Anti Corruption Commission they are interested in pursuing my complaint about the abuse of hospital drugs by ZANU PF and the minister of health during the lupane by-election.”

Commenting on the election ZESN an election monitoring body said, “The highest-profile case of vote-buying was the letter, which circulated on social media platforms where the minister of Health and Child Care was responding to a request by the ZANU PF national secretary for commissariat for assistance in the party’s campaign efforts by ensuring that medicines were supplied to clinics within the constituency.”

“Come Home And Bury Your Uncle,” Zhuwao Told

Norton Member of Parliament Temba Mliswa has urged exiled former cabinet Minister Patrick Zhuwao to come back to Zimbabwe and bury his uncle the former President of the Republic of Zimbabwe Robert Mugabe who passed away in Singapore on Friday morning.

Mliswa said, “My brother Patrick, nematambudziko, you know I’ve always been in touch with you and have always said you’ve no case to answer. Where they tried to implicate you in the NSSA forensic audit, they failed. You’re like your uncle when it comes to theft, it’s just not in your DNA.”

Mliswa pledged to collect Zhuwao from the airport.

“I appeal that you, therefore, come home to bury your uncle. Be there to support Mkoma Leo and Family. I’ll even pick you up from the airport. Even in the unlikely event you’re arrested just go through it as you’ll come out clean; please come home your family needs you.”

Zhuwao fled the country during the height of the November 2017 coup that was waged by the army to end 37 years of President Robert Mugabe’s rule.

It Feels Like Hell, As Young Warriors Are Humiliated

State Media|If you are a Zimbabwean football fan, this is probably as close to what hell feels like as possible. What a week it has been, humiliation on all fronts as if football — the world’s most beautiful game — is on an agenda to remind us of its other ugly side which rears its head when you take this game for granted.

Never before in the history of Zimbabwean football has a week been as bad as what the last six days have delivered for this country — embarrassment, indignity, shame, disgrace, ignominy, comeuppance and torture for the game’s long-suffering fans.

First, it was that Mighty Warriors’ no-show at the National Sports Stadium, the first team to fail to fulfil a home international fixture in the history of this game.

Then, it was followed by the Warriors’ shock and embarrassing loss to the weakest nation in the world — Somalia — a homeless team that had never won a World Cup qualifier in their history before and never tasted a win in an international game since the turn of the millennium.

Last night, as if this script is being written by the Devil himself, it fittingly ended in humiliating fashion at the Orlando Stadium in Johannesburg when the Young Warriors crashed to a 0-5 defeat at the hands of their South African counterparts in the AFCON Under-23 third round, first leg qualifier.

With a ticket to the AFCON Under-23 finals in Egypt at stake, the South Africans brought some of their heavy hitters, led by their Europe-based forwards Luther Singh, who plays for Portuguese side Braga, Lyle Foster, who plays for French side Monaco and Kobamelo Kodisang, who is on the books of Portuguese side Sanjoanense.

And, with the trio well-supported by the highly-rated SuperSport United duo of Teboho Mokoena and Sipho Mbule, from midfield, the Young Warriors were no match and were already down by three goals at the interval.

Foster teed up Kodisang for the first goal after 17 minutes, Singh doubled their lead in the 35th minute and Mokoena added the third just before the break with a powerful shot.

After the break, Singh made it four and Foster completed the rout.

It could, or should have been six, with 10 minutes remaining when Foster was presented with a golden chance for his brace after being picked out by Kamohelo Mahlatsi, but his header went wide.

In just six days, Zimbabwe has seen their hopes for a place at the 2020 Olympic Games, in both the men and women football tournaments, evaporate at the hands of their regional rivals to the north and south of the country.

Somehow, as if the football gods are reminding us that there is something we are doing wrong in this game, last night’s five-goal thrashing was exactly the same scoreline in the Mighty Warriors defeat in the first leg of their Olympic Games qualifier against Zambia in Lusaka.

Then, having come home for the reverse fixture, the Mighty Warriors boycotted that encounter because of sharp differences between the players and the football leaders over payment of their dues.

And, since then, it has been getting worse for the country’s football representatives, with the Warriors somehow conspiring to become the first team in the history of the World Cup qualifiers to lose to Somalia in Djibouti on Thursday.

Football can occasionally throw a shock result — Brazil being thrashed 1-7 at home by Germany in their World Cup in the semi-final five years ago.

England thrashing Germany 5-1 in Munich, courtesy of a superb hattrick by Michael Owen on September 1, 2001 in a 2002 World Cup qualifier.

Or the Danish footballers being summoned from their summer holidays to come and replace Yugoslavia at Euro 1992, and somehow, ending up as the champions at a tournament they had failed to qualify in the first place.

But no one loses to Somalia, not in football, and everyone in this game knew that for decades because, no matter whoever was the opposition, the Ocean Stars always lost.

Why?

Because Somalia are not meant to win football matches, as simple as all that.

“A country which has suffered many years of turmoil, unrest, separation, devastation and (division) within its people and has been littered with violence, deaths, wars and now a horrific drought which has affected the nation,’’ journalist Omar Almasri wrote for the Bleacher Report.

“Somalia is a place where unrest and devastation is not a surprising sight and what its people, unfortunately, have been used to for many years.

“This nation has been affected by clan fundamentalism, the rule of warlords and government collapse from the late 1980s.

“The most recognised and infamous clan today is the Al Shabab, who have been involved in many brutal crimes and killings of innocent Somalis ever since its establishment in 2004.

“The group’s main goal is to topple the government and is known to have close ties with Al Qaeda.

“The group or clan has killed thousands of innocent lives, trying to gain power and strike fear in order to gain a foothold on the country.

“The turmoil and chaos began in the late 1980s, around 1988, in the final years of the Cold War. The government began to experience a state of collapse, which led to the rise of various clans and groups to seek control of the country.

“Millions of lives have been taken during this long conflict and many others have fled the country over the years.

“The chaos and turmoil has affected the sport in the country, with young, potential footballers being either recruited by these militant groups or being too frightened for their lives to play football.

“Al Shabab has dominated the headlines not only for their crimes, but also for their stance on football in the country.

“The group banned Somalis from playing and watching their most popular sport on TV and has threatened to kill anyone who gets caught doing either.’’

And, as Almasri notes, they mean it.

“They’re not messing around. During the (2010) World Cup in South Africa, two young Somalis were killed after being caught watching a World Cup match on television,’’ he writes.

“Another sad example of the group forcing their ban was the tragic killing of a rising star by the name of Abdi Salaan Mohamed Ali in a car bombing which killed 10 others a few months ago.

“The group has also detained a 19-year-old Somali international player Sa’ad Saleh Hussain in Afgoye, 30km south of the capital.

“Local football club owners have also been detained and tortured on charges of misguiding the youth.

“Even journalists have been targeted; a Somali journalist was killed . . .after covering a football match and the President of the Somali Football Federation narrowly escaped an assassination attempt as well.

“Somalia’s history of violence, fights and crimes against innocent lives for the past 20 years has had a huge effect on the nation’s progress on the football stage.’’

But, somehow, on Thursday in Djibouti, they found a way to beat the Warriors.

Yes, this really feels like hell if you are a Zimbabwean football fan.

The weekly Sharuko on Saturday column has taken a break this week as the writer is mourning the death of domestic football following the events which happened at the National Sports Stadium, in Djibouti and at the Orlando Stadium in the past week.

“Mugabe Will Be Buried At The National Heroes Acre,” Mutodi

CTV|Robert Mugabe will be buried at the National Heroes Acre an official said Saturday, as the nation began several days of official mourning.

No date for the funeral has been set, and it’s not clear when Mugabe’s body will arrive from Singapore, where he died Friday.

Mugabe, who was 95, will be buried at the National Heroes Acre, which has been set aside for Zimbabweans who have made huge sacrifices during the war against white-minority rule and who dedicated themselves to the nation, which emerged from the ashes of colonial Rhodesia.

“We don’t have the date yet,” deputy information minister Energy Mutodi said. “That is still in the hands of the family and the president, but comrade Mugabe will be buried at the Heroes Acre. That is where he deserves to rest.”

Located on a hilltop, and built with the help of North Korean architects, the plot has a commanding view of Harare, features a huge bronze statue of three guerrilla fighters and boasts black marble and granite flourishes.

Mugabe is viewed by many as a national hero despite decades of rule that left the country struggling. He was an ex-guerrilla chief who took power in 1980 when Zimbabwe shook off white minority rule and presided for decades while economic turmoil and human rights violations eroded its early promise.

Mugabe had been forced to relinquish power by a previously loyal military in November 2017.

Flags flew at half-staff Saturday, but there were no public activities to mark the death of a man who singularly shaped the once-prosperous country in his own image and created a repressive system that some say remains even today.

Reaction to his death was mixed, although praise ironically came mostly from ruling party officials and military leaders.

The state-run Herald newspaper, which vilified Mugabe when he was forced to resign and when he subsequently voiced support for the opposition, carried glowing tributes.

In a “commemorative edition,” the newspaper, which often acts as a mouthpiece of the government, carried a montage of his pictures with the headline: “Robert Mugabe-1924-2019” on its front page and glowing reports throughout.

In an editorial page, the newspaper praised Mugabe for “his uncompromising stance when it came to the rights of Africans.”

“Whatever happened towards the end of his leadership should not be used to rubbish the good things that he did during his life,” the commander of the Zimbabwe Defence Forces and one of the commanders who led the military campaign to oust Mugabe after years of propping his rule, was quoted as saying in a separate story in the newspaper.

Others were less charitable. “95 and out,” read the privately-owned Newsday newspaper.

“Despite his intellectual prowess, Mugabe’s failure to let go of power when it was time was his major undoing . In short, he was a liberator who turned villain. Leaders need to know when to draw the line,” said the newspaper in an editorial.

“End of an era as Mugabe dies, leaves Zim poor, divided,” read the front page headline of another privately-owned newspaper, the Daily News.

“Notwithstanding the many mistakes that he made, many Zimbabweans will probably agree that had he not held on to power beyond the 1990s, he would today be largely remembered as one of Africa’s best leaders in history,” the paper said in an editorial.

Both newspapers were major targets of Mugabe’s vitriol, with editors and reporters routinely arrested during Mugabe’s rule.

On the streets of the capital, Harare, few seemed bothered as people struggled to cope with biting economic problems largely blamed by critics on Mugabe’s rule and perpetuated by his successor and an ally who later turned foe, President Emmerson Mnangagwa. Mnangagwa took power in 2017 with the help of the military.

“Who cares?” said Percy Maute, a street vendor pushing a cart full of tomatoes along a busy street named after the former president. “I don’t care. I am too busy looking for money to mourn a man who put me in this position.”

A small group of people drank beer and sang pro-Mugabe songs outside a liquor outlet and wore T-shirts with Mugabe’s face. Although only a few people cared to join or commiserate with them, they danced vigorously and spoke glowingly of a man they said fought for the liberation of not just Zimbabwe, but “the rest of Africa.”

“Bob was our hero, he taught us that the white man is not a master,” they sang. Mugabe was popularly known by the nickname Bob.

Warriors Make Drastic Changes For Somalia Return Leg

Khama Billiat celebrates goal Ovidy Karuru of Zimbabwe during the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations Finals match between Uganda and Zimbabwe at Cairo International Stadium, Cairo, Egypt on 26 June 2019 ©Samuel Shivambu/BackpagePix

Friday Sep 06, 2019. 15:00

Zimbabwe have switched the date and venue of the second leg of their World Cup first round qualifier against Somalia from Bulawayo on Sunday to Harare next Tuesday.

Zimbabwe suffered an embarrassing 1-0 loss in the first leg played in neutral Djibouti on Thursday.

The switch comes at the request of the Somalis who were unable to secure flights to Bulawayo before the scheduled return match on Sunday.

“The Zimbabwe Football Association wishes to advise all football stakeholders that following a request from the Somali Football Federation, and in consultations with FIFA, our 2022 World Cup qualifier second leg against Somalia has been rescheduled,” said a statement.

“The match will now be played on Tuesday after SFF failed to secure flights to Zimbabwe in time for the initial fixture date which was Sunday.

“The venue of the match has also been moved from Barbourfields Stadium in Bulawayo to the National Sports Stadium in Harare because we already have another international match scheduled for Barbourfields on the September 10.”

Zimbabwe’s under-23 team host South Africa there in the return leg of their Olympic Games qualifier.

“We understand the inconvenience this development presents to all stakeholders and we unreservedly apologise for the unexpected developments,’’ ZIFA added.

“In the spirit of fair play, African solidarity, brotherhood and togetherness, we felt the Somali Football Federation’s request was reasonable and sincere, thus, we had to consent, otherwise the match would not have taken place at all.

My Opinion On Robert Mugabe Ta-ta, Robert Mugabe!

Robert Mugabe

By Emeka Obineche| There are three reasons for sadness as the former Zimbabwean dictator Robert Mugabe’s remains lie in a mortuary in Singapore.

The first is he lived as long as he did. The second is he is dying unpunished for some of the foulest crimes of this era. And, the third is his victims will never be compensated for the loss of liberty during his repressive rule.
More than 20 000 Zimbabweans in Matabeleland were killed during Gukurahundi by Mugabe and his acolytes, most of whom constitute the current regime, for opposing his tyrannical rule.

The Perence-Shiri-led Five Brigade butchered defenceless Ndebele-speaking citizens, supporters of the Zimbabwe African People’s Union (ZAPU), an opposition party led by Joshua Nkomo, his erstwhile ally in the guerrilla war that ushered independence from British rule in 1980.

Those who survived the bullets from the guns were finished off by the bayonets of the AK47s. Corpses of defenceless men, women and children were put in shallow and mass graves or disused mineshafts. Even their livestock went along with them.

Amid the genocide, the world cheered him on. Some even gave Mugabe honorary degrees. Such is the hypocritical world we live in.
Mugabe, a self-avowed Catholic, helped himself to Stanley Goreraza’s wife, Grace, while his esteemed wife, Sally, lay in her deathbed, siring two children in the process. The hapless Goreraza was sent to the United States to further his studies and later on given a diplomatic posting, just to get him out of the way.

Starting in 2000, more than 5 000 Zimbabweans were forced off their farms plunging Africa’s breadbasket into a basket case. Their crime: they supported the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), an opposition party led by the late opposition leader, Morgan Tsvangirai. Millions of Zimbabweans fled abject poverty into neighbouring countries and overseas as the situation in the southern African country plummeted.

Zimbabweans watched helplessly in 2008 from their safe havens abroad as the dead dictator, aided and abetted by the current despot, Emmerson Mnangagwa, and the disgraced former South African president Thabo Mbeki, refused to hand over power to Tsvangirai after a routing at the polls. They watched helplessly as the victor was forced into a compromise government to avoid a bloodbath reminiscent of Gukurahundi. And, they watched helplessly as Mugabe’s thugs continued their reign of terror on their relatives countrywide.

The painful thing is, most Zimbabweans will have nothing or very little to leave for their children when they die. Yet, the dead despot’s children have jaw-dropping wealth looted during his ruinous rule. Going by Mugabe’s own admission, US$15 billion from Chiadzwa diamonds was looted in less than a decade. One shudders to think how much more was stolen in the 37 years he was in power.

Zimbabweans will remember him as the lunatic who inherited a wonderful economy and plunged it into a basket case because of his obsession with power.

Ta-ta Robert Gabriel Mugabe!

Mugoba Who Died Within Hours Of Mugabe Declared National Hero

The government has declared the late Major General Mugoba a national hero. The announcement was made by Vice President Kembo Mohadi made at the family home in Harare on Saturday morning.

The late Mugoba was described by the Minister of Defence and War Veterans Affairs, Oppah Muchinguri-Kashiri as a professional and hardworking man who defended the country during and after the liberation struggle.

Mugoba died around 8.30 am on Friday at the Avenues Clinic in Harare after a short illness.


Commander Defence Forces General Phillip Valerio Sibanda told state media on Friday that Major General Mugoba had just arrived from Ethiopia where he was deployed to the African Union (AU) standby force in 2017.

“He left Ethiopia two weeks ago and when he came back home he was actually on leave but his condition deteriorated a few days ago leading to his death,” said Sibanda.

“Christ died once and resurrected once. ‘I have died and resurrected, and I don’t know how many times I will die and resurrect.’ Mugabe

The news that Zimbabwe’s former president Robert Mugabe has died has undoubtedly evoked opposing emotions from many.

Mugabe, who passed away aged 95, was known for being outspoken about controversial topics. He famously vowed to rule the nation until he died, claiming he had been appointed by God, and was infamous in the western world for his views on homosexuality, Jesus Christ and Hitler.

Here, we look back on some of his most telling quotes.

On dying

‘I have died many times. That’s where I have beaten Christ. ‘Christ died once and resurrected once. ‘I have died and resurrected, and I don’t know how many times I will die and resurrect.’ – On his 88th birthday, 2012.

On Adolf Hitler

‘I am still the Hitler of the time. This Hitler has only one objective, justice for his own people, sovereignty for his people, recognition of the independence of his people.

‘If that is Hitler, then let me be a Hitler tenfold.’ – State funeral of a cabinet minister, 2003.

On homosexuality

‘They are worse than pigs and dogs… Those who do it, we will say, they are wayward. It is just madness, insanity.’ – ZDC radio interview, 2015.

‘We equally reject attempts to prescribe ‘new rights’ that are contrary to our values, norms, traditions, and beliefs. We are not gays!’ – UN General Assembly, 2015.

On Britain, Zimbabwe’s former colonial ruler

 ‘The British were brought up as a violent people, liars, scoundrels and crooks… I am told that [Tony] Blair was a troublesome little boy at school.’ – 2001.

‘We have fought for our land, we have fought for our sovereignty, small as we are we have won our independence and we are prepared to shed our blood…

‘So, Blair keep your England, and let me keep my Zimbabwe.’ – Earth Summit, South Africa, 2002.

On leaders

‘Mandela has gone a bit too far in doing good to the non-black communities, really in some cases at the expense of (blacks)… That’s being too saintly, too good.’ – 2013.

‘We have this American president, Obama, born of an African father, who is saying we will not give you aid if you don’t embrace homosexuality. We ask, was he born out of homosexuality? We need continuity in our race, and that comes from the woman, and no to homosexuality.’

‘Since President Obama endorses the same-sex marriage, advocates homosexual people, and enjoys an attractive countenance – thus if it becomes necessary, I shall travel to Washington D.C, get down on my knee, and ask his hand.’ – During a speech, 2003

On Imperialism

‘Africa must revert to what it was before the imperialists divided it. These are artificial divisions which we, in our pan-African concept, will seek to remove.’ – A speech at Salisbury, 1962.

‘It could never be a correct justification that because the whites oppressed us yesterday when they had power, the blacks must oppress them today.’ – 1980.

‘You are now our enemies because you really have behaved as enemies of Zimbabwe. We are full of anger. Our entire community is angry and that is why we now have the war veterans seizing land.’ – 2000.

‘Our party must continue to strike fear in the heart of the white man, our real enemy.’ – A ZANU-PF rally, 2002.

On his leadership

‘Our economy is a hundred times better, than the average African economy. Outside South Africa, what country is [as good as] Zimbabwe? … What is lacking now are goods on the shelves – that is all.– Interview, 2007.

‘Only God who appointed me will remove me – not the MDC [opposition], not the British.’ – Election rally, 2008.

‘Some are saying “Mr Mugabe is old, so he should step down”… No! When my time comes, I will tell you.’ – 2014.

‘My decision to resign is voluntary on my part. ‘It arises from my concern for the welfare of the people of Zimbabwe and my desire to ensure a smooth, peaceful and non-violent transfer of power that underpins national security, peace and stability.’ – Resignation letter, 2017.

Chamisa Meets Graca Machel

Farai Dziva|MDC leader Nelson Chamisa had a meeting with with Graca Machel and former President of Ireland Mary Robinson.

“Just had a great meeting with the Elders Mama Graca Machel and Former Ireland President Mary Robinson.

Fixing politics through genuine and credible political dialogue for comprehensive political and economic reforms is the only viable solution to the challenges Zimbabwe is facing,”said Chamisa.

Declare Seven Days of Mourning Death Of Democracy

MDC Youth Assembly notes with aghast and disdain at how the Emmerson Mnangagwa military regime prioritize the dead over the living.

It has been a free fall galore with prices hitting the roof and electricity blackouts, water shortages, poverty and abuse of human rights reigning supreme under Emmerson Mnangagwa’s watch!

So loud is Mnangagwa’s silence on critical issues affecting the living!

It is Mnangagwa’s fathomless love for dead over the living that boggles the mind and at one point the septuagenarian chose to fly one person (Grace Mugabe) on a 3 million luxurious jet just to mourn her mom while the nation is plagued by a debilitating economic crisis.

Then enter Oliver Mutukudzi’s death and all the political drama that ensued as Emmerson Mnangagwa tried so hard to control funeral proceedings in a bid to please the dead over the living!

So insatiable is his desire to care for dead that he could not stomach any manoeuvres by his political rival, Nelson Chamisa to be near the funeral procession of the iconic musician!

True to his form, the poverty stricken and long suffering Zimbabweans woke up to disgusting news that Mr Mnangagwa has declared 7 days to force Zimbabweans to mourn the death of the very same man who authored their misery and poverty.

As a generation that was born in abject poverty authored and sculptured by Robert Mugabe and perfected by his henchmen, Emmerson Mnangagwa surely it will be an insult to be forced to mourn one of our detractors.

This is a man who laid a deleterious foundation that still threatens to wipe out the entire generation and we are still grappling with the ripple effects of his 37 years in power like unemployment, poverty and shrinking democratic space.

Emmerson Mnangagwa is neither a saint too, for he was and is still part of the establishment whose sole purpose at the echelons of power has nothing whatsoever to do with upgrading ordinary citizens’ lives but to pursue parochial interests.

As a generation that has been adversely affected by both Mugabe and Mnangagwa maladministration, we see no reason why we must be forced to mourn the former for 7 days.

Instead, it is our resolve that we would rather mourn the death and dearth of democratic space, good standard of living and basic commodities for the upcoming 7 days.

Stephen Sarkozy Chuma
MDC Youth Assembly National Spokesperson

Magistrate Nabbed For Embezzling ZW$431 Court Funds

By A Correspondent- A Filabusi magistrate has been arrested for allegedly embezzling court funds amounting to $431.

Mzingaye Ephraim Moyo (33), who is the resident magistrate in charge of Filabusi Magistrates’ Court, was not asked to plead when he appeared briefly before Gwanda regional magistrate, Mr Mark Dzira, facing a charge of criminal abuse of office.

He was remanded out of custody to September 17 on $300 bail.

Mr Dzira granted Moyo bail on condition that he reports every Friday at Filabusi Police Station, does not go to Filabusi Magistrates’ Court, surrenders his passport and does not interfere with State witnesses. The State did not oppose bail.

Prosecuting, Miss Faith Mutukwa said Moyo received $431 from the clerk of court and converted the money to his own use instead of depositing it into the court’s account.

“Between 19-24 August, Moyo, who is the resident magistrate in charge of Filabusi Magistrate’s Court, received $431 being judicial fines, court fees and Z69 (j) funds from the clerk of court and signed for the money. Instead of depositing the money into the court’s and administration account, he converted the money into his own use.

“He later transferred an equivalent amount of $431 from his personal account into the court’s and administration account which is contrary to his duties as a public officer. The offense was discovered on September 3 and the matter was reported to the police resulting in his arrest,” she said.

Moyo is being represented by Mr Zibusiso Ncube of Ncube and Partners Legal Practitioners.-StateMedia

Two Mt Darwin Panners Buried Alive

By A Correspondent- Two Mt Darwin artisanal miners died on Friday after a mineshaft collapsed and buried them while panning for gold.

Stewart Marimo (36) and Oliver Muchenje (32), both from Gotani village under Chief Kandeya, were trapped to death while panning for gold in the same village

Mashonaland Central police spokesperson Inspector Milton Mundembe confirmed the tragedy.

It is alleged that on the fateful day, a syndicate of four artisanal miners last Friday entered a disused shaft in search of gold. While they were panning, the shaft collapsed and trapped the now-deceased who died on the spot.

“We are appealing to all those who are interested into mining to license their activities and shun illegal mining. A lot of artisanal miners are dying due to lack of skills, hence they should get the adequate mining skills before practising,” Mundembe said.-Newsday

White Farmers Urged To Obtain Offer Letters

By A Correspondent- Govt has appealed to white commercial farmers who were spared the ax during the fast-track land redistribution program to formally approach the Lands ministry and obtain offer letters in order to acquire bankable 99-year leases.

Addressing Mashonaland West farmers yesterday, Lands and Agriculture minister Perrance Shiri said:

“If you are occupying a farm and you don’t have an offer letter, go (and) get an offer letter. The reason why the government has allowed you to remain on the piece of land up to today is that they want you. They recognized the role you are playing, so go (and) get an offer letter.”

“There should be no other considerations to say you are not on the list. Which list? The (Zanu-PF) party representatives recommended some farmers to remain. I am a member of the Zanu-PF politburo. So, we are saying all those who are on the land who do not have offer letters, please, do us a favor so that you don’t unnecessarily get inconvenienced,” Shiri added.

Turning to the issue of illegal settlers, Shiri said they should be evicted.

“We have tasked Provincial Affairs ministers, using their Joint Operational Command team when applicable, to ensure that illegal settlers are removed and those who are genuinely in need of the land they should be resettled once land has been identified,” he said .

Shiri expressed concern over vast tracts of land lying idle in various parts of the country and urged the landowners to fully utilise the resource or risk evictions.

Gokwe Man Rapes 13yr Old Daughter While Son (4) Watches

By A Correspondent- A 45-year-old man from Gokwe South has been arrested on charges of raping his 13-year-old daughter in front of his four-year-old son.

This was heard when the accused (name withheld) appeared before Gweru regional magistrate Phathekile Msipa charged with one count of rape.

Prosecutor Michael Ndoro told court that on July 14 this year, at around 4pm, the accused went to the kitchen where his daughter was doing household chores while her younger brother was seated in the same room. The accused allegedly grabbed the complainant and raped her, while her brother was watching.

The two minors had been left in the custody of their father after their mother went to Gokwe town centre for shopping.

“After the incident, the complainant kept crying for help, which prompted her neighbour to rush to the scene. After enquiring what had happened, the neighbour accompanied her to the police station where a report was filed, leading to the arrest of the accused,” the prosecutor said.

The accused, who was not represented, denied the charge and was remanded in custody to Monday next week.-Newsday

Zim Vigil To Mark Robert Mugabe’s Passing In London

By A Correspondent- Zimbabwe Vigil Coordinators have urged Zimbabweans near London to come to a vigil to mark Robert Mugabe’s passing.

Read the message from the vigil coordinators:

“The Zimbabwe Vigil will mark the passing of Robert Mugabe from 2 – 5 pm on Saturday 7th September 2019 at the Zimbabwe Embassy London. Come and join us and bring your own messages and posters.”

The Zimbabwe Vigil takes place every Saturday afternoon outside the Zimbabwean Embassy in London.

The Zimbabwe Vigil protests against gross violations of human rights.

I Was Inspired By Mugabe -Peter Ndlovu

LEGENDARY former Warriors captain Peter Ndlovu has revealed how he used to consult former President Robert Mugabe whenever he wanted to make a move in his illustrious footballing carrier.

Mugabe died yesterday at the age of 95 in a hospital in Singapore where he was receiving treatment.


And, as tributes continue to pour from across the world, Zimbabwe’s most successful captain Ndlovu said he always wanted to give his iconic Warriors jersey Number 12 to the late former President.


“Today (yesterday) is indeed a very sad day for us, Zimbabwe, Africa and the world,’’ King Peter said.


“We have lost our father, leader, friend, hero and an icon. In simpler terms, we have lost a legend. I would like to appreciate what he (Mugabe) did for me as an individual and the pivotal roles he played in advising me, and my former manager Winston Makamure, throughout my footballing career and life in general.


“I never moved to any club without consulting him as a father, to have an input.”
The Mamelodi Sundowns manager had in previous interviews pledged to hand over one of his Warriors shirt to the late former President.


“As per the promise that I made to the world in one of my interviews, which was to be carried in a BBC documentary in which I said my Number 12 special shirt that I wore with pride and joy, would only part with me going Robert Gabriel Mugabe’s way, I would have loved to present it to him.


“I would have wanted to do that while he was still alive to show more respect. As people, unfortunately, only appreciate and honour people when they are gone.


“However, I will make means to have access, through the family, to present this shirt. I would also appeal to fellow legends to help me out.


“May his soul rest in eternal peace and may his family, wife Grace and the kids, be consoled in Jesus’ name and may the Almighty God lay his healing Hands upon you all and the whole world to be able to deal with this sad loss.”State media

Robert Mugabe

Woman Who Assaulted Hubby’s Mistress With Hammer Nabbed

By A Correspondent- The Zimbabwe Republic Police have arrested a woman who appears on a video that has gone viral assaulting a young woman who appears to her husband’s mistress with a claw hammer.

The woman is heard telling the girl that she must stop sleeping with her husband.

In the video, another girl who appears like a daughter is invited to join the beatings.

In a statement, ZRP said:

“The culprits have been arrested, investigations are in progress and the due process of the law will be applied. We appreciate the cooperation from the members of the public who provided valuable info in this case.”

Watch the video below:

Mugabe Erased Own Heroics By Clinging To Power For Too Long-Ngarivhume

On behalf of the Transform Zimbabwe family and on my own behalf, I would like to express my deepest condolences to the Mugabe family and to the people of Zimbabwe following the death of founding leader Robert Gabriel Mugabe.

Mugabe fought a good fight as a revolutionary, but soon became a cruel dictator after assuming power in 1980. Consequently, he ended up creating many enemies including within his own party resulting in his ouster in the infamous coup of November 2017.

Ironically, he is leaving a nation behind which is worse off economically, socially and politically than it was in 1980 at independence. He created a security apparatus so brutal it even turned against him in November 2017. He oversaw a disastrous succession plan that groomed the current leadership which he did not want to preside over his own funeral.

Today Zimbabweans are more oppressed by the party he founded than they were in 1980 by the Smith regime.

May his soul rest in eternal peace. He was a great revolutionary in his own right.

Jacob Ngarivhume
Transform Zimbabwe, President

Robert Mugabe

VP Mohadi Cleans Glen View

By A Correspondent- Vice-President Kembo Mohadi has called on Zimbabweans to promote sustainable waste management practices and initiatives in a bid to keep a clean environment.

Kembo Mohadi

Speaking at the National Environment Cleaning Day campaign at Glen View 1 Shopping Centre in Harare Friday, VP Mohadi said promoting sustainable waste management benefited the country economically as it will “create investment opportunities in waste management projects and green jobs.

He said:

“A clean environment also attracts tourists, resulting in job creation and foreign currency generation.

We need to conform to global trends of reducing plastic pollution by giving ourselves up to December 2020 to eliminate and phase out single-use plastics. To date, over 60 countries in the world have either banned or restricted single-use plastics and over 30 of these countries are in Africa.

Let it, therefore, be kept in mind that as a nation, we are committed to live in a clean environment.

May I remind the nation that the National Clean-Up Day should be part of our culture, hence I am calling all Zimbabweans to embrace it. We need to further train ourselves in good hygienic and environmentally positive habits. The clean-up should not be a one-day affair, but a culture for everyone.

Adoption of streets, or roads by corporates has become the most recent way of corporate social responsibility demonstrated by the private sector the world over. I appeal to the corporate world to step forward and adopt roads or portions and not only clean them up, but also green them up.”-StateMedia

“Mugabe Impoverished And Betrayed People’s Hopes”: US Gvnt

By A Correspondent- The United States government has extended a condolence message to Zimbabwe following the death of former president Robert Mugabe adding that his human rights abuses and gross economic mismanagement however betrayed the majority’s hopes of a better Zimbabwe.

Below is the statement by the US:

“We extend our condolences to those mourning the loss of former Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe. Robert Mugabe helped liberate Zimbabwe, but his human rights abuses and gross economic mismanagement impoverished millions and betrayed his people’s hopes for their nation. We continue to support the aspirations of the Zimbabwean people for a better, more prosperous future.”

ZACC Probes Obediah Moyo?

By A Correspondent- MDC Secretary-General Charlton Hwende says the Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission has indicated that it wants to investigate allegations of vote-buying involving the Minister of Health Obadiah Moyo in the Lupane by-election held this year.

Said Hwende:

“Today when I was traveling to the Airport I received a phone call from the Anti Corruption Commission they are interested in pursuing my complaint about the abuse of hospital drugs by ZANU PF and the minister of health during the lupane by-election.”

“Come Back Home”: Mliswa Tells Zhuwao

By A Correspondent- Norton Member of Parliament Temba Mliswa has urged exiled former cabinet Minister Patrick Zhuwao to come back to Zimbabwe and bury his uncle the former President of the Republic of Zimbabwe Robert Mugabe who passed away in Singapore on Friday morning.

Mliswa said:

“My brother Patrick, nematambudziko, you know I’ve always been in touch with you and have always said you’ve no case to answer. Where they tried to implicate you in the NSSA forensic audit, they failed. You’re like your uncle when it comes to theft, it’s just not in your DNA.”

Mliswa pledged to collect Zhuwao from the airport.

“I appeal that you, therefore, come home to bury your uncle. Be there to support Mkoma Leo and Family. I’ll even pick you up from the airport. Even in the unlikely event you’re arrested just go through it as you’ll come out clean; please come home your family needs you.”

Zhuwao fled the country during the height of the November 2017 coup that was waged by the army to end 37 years of President Robert Mugabe’s rule.

Govt Dismisses Circulating Message Announcing A 7 Day Public Holiday

Government has dismissed circulating messages to the effect that a seven day public holiday has been declared to mourn the late national hero Robert Mugabe who passed on yesterday morning in Singapore.

In a statement on Twitter, government said;

SCHOOLS OPENING DAY
Schools are due to open on Tuesday 10 September 2019. There has been no change to that plan. Please ignore any messages to the contrary. Boarders are expected to travel to their respective schools on Monday 9 September 2019. Thank You

“Mugabe’s Last Days Should Not Tarnish The Good He Did”: Army Boss

By A Correspondent- nCommander Zimbabwe Defence Forces General Philip Valerio Sibanda has said whatever happened during former President Robert Mugabe’s last days should not be used to tarnish all the good he did for the nation.

Gen Sibanda said this as he sent the Zimbabwe Defence Forces (ZDF) condolence message to the Mugabe family, the Zimbabwean population and the whole African continent, following the death of Mugabe yesterday morning.

In an interview with the media at Robert Gabriel Mugabe International Airport, Gen Sibanda said Mugabe played his part during the liberation struggle.

“It is a very sad day indeed for Zimbabwe Defence Forces and Zimbabwe in general. I received the news early this morning.

“He played his part in the liberation of this country and in moving this country from colonialism at Independence to where we are today.

“Whatever happened towards the end of his leadership should not be used to rubbish the good things that he did during his life,” said Gen Sibanda.

-StateMedia

“Three Reasons For Sadness Over Mugabe’s Death”

By Own Correspondent- There are three reasons for sadness as the former Zimbabwean dictator Robert Mugabe’s remains lie in a mortuary in Singapore.

The first is he lived as long as he did. The second is he is dying unpunished for some of the foulest crimes of this era. And, the third is his victims will never be compensated for the loss of liberty during his repressive rule.

More than 20 000 Zimbabweans in Matabeleland were killed during Gukurahundi by Mugabe and his acolytes, most of whom constitute the current regime, for opposing his tyrannical rule.

The Perence-Shiri-led Five Brigade butchered defenceless Ndebele-speaking citizens, supporters of the Zimbabwe African People’s Union (ZAPU), an opposition party led by Joshua Nkomo, his erstwhile ally in the guerrilla war that ushered independence from British rule in 1980.

Those who survived the bullets from the guns were finished off by the bayonets of the AK47s. Corpses of defenceless men, women and children were put in shallow and mass graves or disused mineshafts. Even their livestock went along with them.

Amid the genocide, the world cheered him on. Some even gave Mugabe honorary degrees. Such is the hypocritical world we live in.

Mugabe, a self-avowed Catholic, helped himself to Stanley Goreraza’s wife, Grace, while his esteemed wife, Sally, lay in her deathbed, siring two children in the process. The hapless Goreraza was sent to the United States to further his studies and later on given a diplomatic posting, just to get him out of the way.

Starting in 2000, more than 5 000 Zimbabweans were forced off their farms plunging Africa’s breadbasket into a basket case. Their crime: they supported the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), an opposition party led by the late opposition leader, Morgan Tsvangirai. Millions of Zimbabweans fled abject poverty into neighbouring countries and overseas as the situation in the southern African country plummeted.

Zimbabweans watched helplessly in 2008 from their safe havens abroad as the dead dictator, aided and abetted by the current despot, Emmerson Mnangagwa, and the disgraced former South African president Thabo Mbeki, refused to hand over power to Tsvangirai after a routing at the polls.

They watched helplessly as the victor was forced into a compromise government to avoid a bloodbath reminiscent of Gukurahundi. And, they watched helplessly as Mugabe’s thugs continued their reign of terror on their relatives countrywide.

The painful thing is, most Zimbabweans will have nothing or very little to leave for their children when they die. Yet, the dead  despot’s children have jaw-dropping wealth looted during his ruinous rule. Going by Mugabe’s own admission, US$15 billion from Chiadzwa diamonds was looted in less than a decade. One shudders to think how much more was stolen in the 37 years he was in power.

Zimbabweans will remember him as the lunatic who inherited a wonderful economy and plunged it into a basket case because of his obsession with power.

Ta-ta Robert Gabriel Mugabe!

FULL TEXT: US Govt Statement On Mugabe’s Death

We extend our condolences to those mourning the loss of former Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe. Robert Mugabe helped liberate Zimbabwe, but his human rights abuses and gross economic mismanagement impoverished millions and betrayed his people’s hopes for their nation. We continue to support the aspirations of the Zimbabwean people for a better, more prosperous future.

ZIMRA Board Chair Hauled To Court Over Abuse Of Office

By A Correspondent| Zimra Board Chairman Callisto Mazorodze Jokonya on Friday appeared in court for renewing an employee’s contract without following due process. 

Mr Jokonya who is out on $5000 bail is facing 2 counts of abuse of duty as a public officer.

It is the state’s case that in June 2019 Mr Jokonya showed Happier Kuzvinzwa favour by causing the renewal of his contract which has expired on 31 May. 

Its alleged Jokonya wrote a letter to Mthuli Ncube who is the appointing authority saying he had had consultations with the Zimra board and they had agreed to reinstate Kuzvinzwa and Mthuli subsequently approved the contract renewal.

The Board Chair then used the approval letter from Prof Ncube to instruct the Zimra Commissioner-General to draw a contract for Kuzvinzwa and she refused since there was no board resolution to that effect.

Jokonya then drew a contract for Kuzvinzwa and co-signed it in front of external lawyers.

On the second count, Jokonya wanting to ratify his mistake then called a board meeting to delibarate on the issue of Kuzvinzwa’s contact, some board members then suggested that legal opinion be sought since Prof Ncube had already approved his contract renewal. 

Reported a local publication:

“Jokonya then allegedly abused or took advantage of his office as Zimra board chairperson by personally procuring consultancy service from Caleb Muchecche Partners Law Chambers without going through the standard procedure of using the procurement management unit.”-StateMedia

Academy For Women Entrepreneurs Launched

By A Correspondent- The United States Embassy in Harare has launched an Academy for Women Entrepreneurs that is premised at providing personalised business mentorship, tools and networks to 100 local participants.

Participants for the six-month programme will be drawn from Harare, Bulawayo and Mutare and have to be aged between 18 and 35.

The initiative which is a White House initiative to support women entrepreneurs globally shall be implemented through Act in Africa, with alumni and social entrepreneur trainers led by Irene Chikumbo, a Yali Mandela Washington Fellowship alumnus.

In a statement yesterday, the Embassy said:

“Chikumbo will work with four other facilitators to conduct the trainings in three cities – Harare, Bulawayo and Mutare. In addition to the social entrepreneurship modules, participants will watch and discuss modules online from the Thunderbird Business School.”

The statement also indicated that the training will explore the fundamentals of business such as preparing business plans, obtaining capital and connecting with networks of successful businesswomen.-Newsday

MUGABE: Loved And Hated In Equal Measure

ZIMBABWEANS and political leaders from across the globe yesterday expressed mixed reactions to news of the death of former President Robert Mugabe, with some describing him as a judicious leader while others labelled him one of Africa’s worst dictators who overstayed in power and eventually ruined his legacy.

Last night, President Emmerson Mnangagwa declared Mugabe a national hero and said all the coming days would be set aside for mourning until the 95-year-old former Statesman is laid to rest.

Mugabe died yesterday morning at the age of 95 after being admitted at Gleneagles Hospital in Singapore in April this year.

Friends and foes immediately took to social media to express their views, with some analysts saying his style of leadership spanning 37 years was loved and hated in equal measure.

Mugabe was toppled in a military coup at the height of the ruling Zanu PF party’s factional fights in November 2017 and immediately succeeded by his then deputy, Mnangagwa, following a nasty fallout.

Mnangagwa broke the news of his political mentor’s death in a tweet, describing Mugabe as a liberation war icon and pan-Africanist who sacrificed all for the emancipation of Zimbabweans.

“Cde Mugabe was an icon of liberation, a pan-Africanist who dedicated his life to the emancipation and empowerment of his people. His contribution to the history of our nation and continent will never be forgotten.

May his soul rest in eternal peace,” Mnangagwa said on Twitter before cutting short his business engagements at the World Economic Forum in Cape Town, South Africa, to come back home and arrange for the repatriation of Mugabe’s remains.

Mugabe, who, during his tenure attracted scorn from the opposition after denying national hero status to several

deserving liberation war heavyweights, is reported to have told close family members that he wished to be buried at his rural home in Zvimba, Mashonaland West province.

Although Mnangagwa is yet to publicly respond to the proposal, top Zanu PF sources said government was most likely to override Mugabe’s deathbed wish and bury him at the national shrine, where his first wife, Sally, was laid to rest.

National Peace and Reconciliation Commission (NPRC) chairperson retired Justice Selo Maselo Nare said Mugabe would be remembered for extending an olive branch to his white oppressors at independence in 1980.

Justice Nare added that Mugabe’s peace and reconciliation efforts brought once warring parties Zanu and PF Zapu together when he and then Zapu leader, the late Joshua Nkomo signed the Unity Agreement on December 22, 1987,

allowing citizens to once again taste peace after the regrettable Gukurahundi violence in Matabeleland and Midlands provinces.

“At a time the country was at a crossroads, Cde Mugabe again signed the Global Political Agreement with the late

MDC-T leader Morgan Tsvangirai to pave way for the Government of National Unity. It is no coincidence that the constitutional and legislative processes to establish and operationalise NPRC began during his tenure as President,” Justice Nare said.

“The NPRC extends its heartfelt condolences to the Mugabe family, President Emmerson Mnangagwa and the government of the Republic of Zimbabwe for the sad (and) untimely departure of the liberation icon and Pan-Africanist.”

Most loathed at home, Mugabe was revered in the Sadc region as an iconic leader.

Many African leaders described Mugabe as a liberation legend, with Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta declaring three days of mourning the former Zanu PF leader.

Neighbouring South Africa’s ruling African National Congress (ANC) party hailed Mugabe for exhibiting principled leadership, saying Africa was poorer without him.

ANC secretary-general Ace Magashule said Mugabe’s life epitomised the “new African” who, having shrugged off the colonial yoke, strived to ensure his country took its place among the community of nations, firmly in charge of its own destiny.

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa also acknowledged the role Mugabe played in advancing regional solidarity, integration and development through Zimbabwe’s participation in the Southern African Development Community.

Mugabe’s decision to invest in his country’s education helped the nation even after the collapse of its economy, South Africa’s opposition United Democratic Movement leader Bantu Holomisa said in a statement.

But Democratic Alliance spokesperson Solly Malatsi said Mugabe would be remembered for his conflicting legacy as

a liberator towards independence and an oppressor of the democratic values he once fought for.

Britain, Zimbabwe’s former colonial master, said Zimbabweans had “suffered for too long” under Mugabe.

“We express our condolences to those who mourn Robert Mugabe’s death. However, Zimbabweans suffered for too long as a result of Mugabe’s autocratic role,” the British Foreign ministry said in a statement.

The European Union said it would continue to stand with Zimbabwe and its people to secure the democratic future of the country.

Russia’s President Vladimir Putin said: “Many important dates in Zimbabwe’s modern history are tied to the name of Robert Mugabe. He made a great personal contribution to the battle for your country’s independence, to the building of Zimbabwean State institutions.”

GraÇa Machel, widow of the late Mozambican leader Samora Machel and South African President Nelson Mandela, said Mugabe was like a brother to her.

“Mugabe was my brother because before he came back in Zimbabwe in 1980, he was in Mozambique. I knew him very well and when my husband, the former President of Mozambique Samora Machel, was killed, I ran and came to this country to Mugabe because I could not sleep,” she said in Harare during a Zimbabwe Council of Churches Women’s Dialogue platform.

“When the former First Lady, the late Sally Mugabe passed away, I also came to Zimbabwe to mourn with him because he was my brother. But there is something wrong with leaders sitting in power for too long. As a result,

for the younger generation, they cannot remember that he contributed immensely for the liberation of this country.”

Exiled former Cabinet minister in Mugabe’s government Jonathan Moyo tweeted: “It’s sad you have gone at the most trying time for Zimbabwe. Truth-telling will one day reveal how you fought your regime’s enforcers to find each

other with (Joshua) Nkomo in 1987 and (Morgan) Tsvangirai in 2009; and why besides yourself, only (Nelson) Chamisa got your vote for the presidency!”

Chamisa said even though his party differed politically with the late former President during his reign, he recognised the positive contributions Mugabe made as the country’s founding President.

“There’s so much to say for a life of 95 years and national leadership spanning over 37 years, but in the true spirit of Ubuntu, we would like to give this moment to mourning, but there will be time for greater reflection,” the opposition MDC leader said yesterday.

MDC national secretary for elections Jacob Mafume said Mugabe ruined his legacy by clinging to power against all odds.

“A lesson learnt is not to overstay in power, a lesson that one can be many things to different people. Hated and loved in equal measure. A ruined country remains, he died far from it,” Mafume said.

Another MDC official, David Coltart, said Mugabe made immense contribution to the country’s education system, but also had a dark side whose negative legacy will live on and haunt Zimbabweans for decades to come.

Youth Forum Zimbabwe director Ashton Bumhira blamed Mugabe for the economic malaise the southern African nation is facing.

“For my generation, Mr Robert Mugabe should be remembered for what he was to us. He was a dictator. He was ruthless. He is the author of the current economic and political challenges we’re facing as a nation,” he said.

“If it was not the coup, Mr Mugabe wanted to rule from the grave. The current Zanu PF leadership is the epitome of his legacy.”

An entrepreneur in Mbare, the slums of Harare, Albert Chibanda (29), described Mugabe as an iconic leader who empowered the youths through various initiatives.

“It is sad to hear that Mugabe has passed on. To us the youths, he empowered us through his indigenisation and

empowerment programmes. He was very influential. During his times, he supported us to establish businesses which are enabling us to put food on the table for our families today,” he said.

Petunia Mugadza (25), a vendor in the capital, said Mugabe, through his economic policies, ensured that Zimbabweans would not suffer.

“I wish if he had lived longer than this. During his days, we did not suffer like we are doing now,” she said.

Opposition New Patriotic Front leader Tendai Peter Munyanduri also said “the world is now poorer without him and his contributions. He tried his best while on earth!”

Standard Chartered Set To Close Gweru Branch

By A Correspondent- Leading Commercial Bank Standard Chartered is set to close its Gweru Branch and transfer all accounts to Bulawayo as they have discovered that their customers now prefer digital banking to physical banking.

In a statement, the bank’s Head, Retail Banking Valeta Mthimkhulu, said:

“We have also noted that our clients are preferring to transact more digitally, including on our recently launched SC Mobile App, our ATMs as well as our online and mobile banking.

The Gweru branch is set to be closed on 1 October. The move to close the branch is also in line with global banking trends where digital banking is the new school.”-NehandaRadio

Cop Jailed 6yrs For Shooting Murder Suspect

By A Correspondent| A 28 year old cop will rue the day he took the law into his own hands after he was jailed 6 years for shooting a murder suspect in the leg. 

Tatenda Manyaira, will spend 6 years behind bars after he was convicted for attempted murder.

He committed the offence when he was stationed in Midlands.

Manyaira shot one Aspicious Kangwara who was wanted in connection with an attempted murder case on the right leg just above the knee cap and he sustained an injury that resulted in his leg being amputated.

It is the state’s case that Manyaira on 13 May 2018 was on duty looking for the suspect Kangwara who was wanted for an attempted murder case. 

Manyaira was with 3 other police officers and one police officer has a riffle loaded with 16 rounds of ammunition. It is believed that the cop approached the suspect and the 2 of them had a misunderstanding that resulted in Manyaira taking a gun from one of the police officers and shooting the suspect. 

The matter was reported to the police and Manyaira was arrested. Handing down the verdict the magistrate said:

You shot the complainant who was unarmed and cooperating with the police. You are sentenced to seven years in prison of which one year is suspended on condition you don’t commit a similar offence in the next five years.-StateMedia

Vigil At Zim Embassy In The UK To Mark Mugabe’s Death

Zimbabwe Vigil Co-Odinators have urged Zimbabweans near London to come to a vigil to mark Robert Mugabe’s passing The Zimbabwean reports. The message from the vigil coordinators read:

The Zimbabwe Vigil will mark the passing of Robert Mugabe from 2 – 5 pm on Saturday 7th September 2019 at the Zimbabwe Embassy London. Come and join us and bring your own messages and posters.

The Zimbabwe Vigil takes place every Saturday afternoon outside the Zimbabwean Embassy in London. The Zimbabwe Vigil protests against gross violations of human rights.

Three Reasons Why Mugabe’s Body Lies In A Singaporean Mortuary

Mugabe’s widow Grace Mugabe leaves a mortuary where her husband’s body is being kept.

Dear Editor|THERE are three reasons for sadness as the former Zimbabwean dictator Robert Mugabe’s remains lie in a mortuary in Singapore.

The first is he lived as long as he did. The second is he is dying unpunished for some of the foulest crimes of this era. And, the third is his victims will never be compensated for the loss of liberty during his repressive rule. 

More than 20 000 Zimbabweans in Matabeleland were killed during Gukurahundi by Mugabe and his acolytes, most of whom constitute the current regime, for opposing his tyrannical rule. 

The Perence-Shiri-led Five Brigade butchered defenceless Ndebele-speaking citizens, supporters of the Zimbabwe African People’s Union (ZAPU), an opposition party led by Joshua Nkomo, his erstwhile ally in the guerrilla war that ushered independence from British rule in 1980. 

Those who survived the bullets from the guns were finished off by the bayonets of the AK47s. Corpses of defenceless men, women and children were put in shallow and mass graves or disused mineshafts. Even their livestock went along with them.
Amid the genocide, the world cheered him on. Some even gave Mugabe honorary degrees. Such is the hypocritical world we live in. 

Mugabe, a self-avowed Catholic, helped himself to Stanley Goreraza’s wife, Grace, while his esteemed wife, Sally, lay in her deathbed, siring two children in the process. The hapless Goreraza was sent to the United States to further his studies and later on given a diplomatic posting, just to get him out of the way.

Starting in 2000, more than 5 000 Zimbabweans were forced off their farms plunging Africa’s breadbasket into a basket case. Their crime: they supported the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), an opposition party led by the late opposition leader, Morgan Tsvangirai. Millions of Zimbabweans fled abject poverty into neighbouring countries and overseas as the situation in the southern African country plummeted.

Zimbabweans watched helplessly in 2008 from their safe havens abroad as the dead dictator, aided and abetted by the current despot, Emmerson Mnangagwa, and the disgraced former South African president Thabo Mbeki, refused to hand over power to Tsvangirai after a routing at the polls. They watched helplessly as the victor was forced into a compromise government to avoid a bloodbath reminiscent of Gukurahundi. And, they watched helplessly as Mugabe’s thugs continued their reign of terror on their relatives countrywide.

The painful thing is, most Zimbabweans will have nothing or very little to leave for their children when they die. Yet, the dead  despot’s children have jaw-dropping wealth looted during his ruinous rule. Going by Mugabe’s own admission, US$15 billion from Chiadzwa diamonds was looted in less than a decade. One shudders to think how much more was stolen in the 37 years he was in power.

Zimbabweans will remember him as the lunatic who inherited a wonderful economy and plunged it into a basket case because of his obsession with power. 
Ta-ta Robert Gabriel Mugabe!

Zimbabweans Begin Days Of Mourning Mugabe Who Moved From Hero To Despot

Zimbabwe was on Saturday due to begin a period of national mourning following the death of Robert Mugabe, the former guerrilla hero turned despot who ruled Zimbabwe for 37 years.

Mugabe ruled Zimbabwe for decades until he was ousted in 2017 by military generals who turned against him
Mugabe ruled Zimbabwe for decades until he was ousted in 2017 by military generals who turned against him

As Zimbabweans expressed sharply divided opinions about Mugabe, President Emmerson Mnangagwa said his predecessor had been declared a “national hero” and that Zimbabwe would mourn him until the burial.

“The late departed icon will be eternally remembered and honoured for the bold and historic land reform programme which he undertook,” said Mnangagwa during a national address broadcast on television.

Mugabe, 95, passed away on Friday at 0240 GMT in Singapore, where he had been hospitalised in April.

First heralded as a liberator who rid the former British colony Rhodesia of white minority rule, Mugabe used repression and fear to govern until he was finally ousted by his previously loyal generals in November 2017.

His increasingly tyrannical leadership and economic mismanagement prompted millions to leave the country.

He had been battling ill health, and after a humiliating fall from office, his stamina seeped away rapidly.

Some Zimbabweans hailed him as a “true African” and a “revolutionary icon”. For others, however, his named evoked only “evil”“destruction” and “suffering”.

“Mugabe was an educated man but he used his education for evil,” said Baster Magwizi, a war veteran in the southwestern city of Bulawayo.

“He manipulated everyone around him and fooled the world, only Zimbabweans can testify to this as we lived in hell under his leadership,” he said.

But Harare schoolteacher Tatenda Musoni was forgiving.

“To be honest I thought I would celebrate when he died but… I’m actually sad because he was an embodiment of what a true African should be.

Zimbabwe under Mugabe
Zimbabwe under Mugabe

He had his flaws but he did a lot of positive things for us which I doubt we will ever see again in this country.

Adam Molai, Mugabe’s nephew, said the former president died of old age “surrounded by family“.

We are pained by his loss. But we also celebrate the life of a legend. He was a living legend. He was a pan-Africanist. He brought the country of Zimbabwe from colonialism to the freedom that we had,” Molai told reporters outside the funeral parlour in Singapore.

He said the president was likely to announce when the body would move “sometime next week“, adding that he could give no further details on the “state funeral“.

In Zvimba, Mugabe’s rural homestead, another nephew Leo Mugabe told reporters the family had “not yet deliberated on where he is going to be buried“.

‘Revolutionary’

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa remembered Mugabe as a “liberation fighter” and a “champion of Africa’s cause against colonialism“.

Kenyan leader Uhuru Kenyatta hailed Mugabe as an “elder statesman, a freedom fighter and a Pan-Africanist who played a major role in shaping the interests of the African continent“.

Mugabe’s popularity faded as he cracked down on opponents
Mugabe’s popularity faded as he cracked down on opponents

China lauded him as an “outstanding national liberation movement leader” while Russian President Vladimir Putin noted Mugabe’s “great personal contribution” to Zimbabwe’s independence.

But Britain said there were “mixed emotions” after his death.

Zimbabweans suffered for too long as a result of Mugabe’s autocratic role,” the foreign ministry said in a statement.

The Mugabe years are widely remembered for his crushing of political dissent and policies that ruined the economy.

The former political prisoner turned guerrilla leader swept to power in 1980 elections after a growing insurgency and economic sanctions forced the Rhodesian government to the negotiating table.

In office, he initially won international plaudits for his declared policy of racial reconciliation and for extending improved education and health services to the black majority.

Human rights violations

But that faded rapidly as Mugabe cracked down on his opponents. During the 1980s, he led an infamous campaign known as Gukurahundi during which an estimated 20,000 dissidents were killed.

The violent seizure of white-owned farms turned him into an international pariah — though his status as a liberation hero still resonates strongly across Africa.

Mugabe died in Singapore where he was hospitalised in April
Mugabe died in Singapore where he was hospitalised in April

Aimed largely at angry war veterans who threatened to destabilise his rule, the land reform policy wrecked the crucial agricultural sector, caused foreign investors to flee and plunged the country into economic misery.

All along, the Mugabe regime was widely accused of human rights violations and of rigging elections.

The topic of his succession was virtually taboo until he reached his 90s and became visibly frail.

As his health weakened, the military finally intervened to quash his second wife Grace’s presidential ambitions in favour of their preferred candidate, Mnangagwa, Mugabe’s vice president at the time.

Mnangagwa took over in November 2017 and was elected in July last year.

“Mugabe Was The Greatest,” Says Mnangagwa Who Kicked Him Out With The Help Of The Army.

President Emmerson Mnangagwa with Mugabe

State Media|Former President Robert Gabriel Mugabe (95), who died in Singapore early yesterday morning, has been declared a national hero. President Mnangagwa — who cut short his trip to South Africa where he was attending the World Economic Forum (WEF) — announced the national hero status while addressing the media at State House in Harare yesterday evening.

Earlier, the ruling Zanu-PF had met at an extraordinary session at the party’s headquarters in Harare to deliberate on the former leader’s status.

“Zanu-PF, which the late departed helped found, has met and accorded him national hero status which he earned and richly deserves,” eulogised President Mnangagwa.

“Let me also register the gratitude of Government and the entire nation to the Government and people of the Republic of Singapore for the unmatched hospitality and medical care they extended to our leader up to the very end.

“In particular, we are most grateful to the team of medical experts and support staff which cared for him with such great diligence, dedication and compassion. They did all they could up to the very end.”

He also declared days of national mourning until the former President’s burial.

“As we await the arrival of the remains of our dear departed icon, we pray that the good Lord grant him mercies, putting his dear soul to eternal rest.

“We as Zimbabweans declare days of mourning of our leader until he is buried,” he said.

The President added that the death of former President Mugabe had left a void in the nation and a legacy of adherence to the rights of Africans.

“A veteran nationalist and a doughty pan-Africanist fighter, Cde Mugabe bequeaths rich and indelible legacy of tenacious adherence to principle on the collective rights of Africa and Africans in general, and in particular, the rights of the people of Zimbabwe for whom he gave his all to help free.

“In his life and political career met and melded key phases, moods and shifts in the story of our national struggle and quest for freedom and statehood including the tragedies, pains and rigours which underwrote that epic story.

“Incarcerated for 11 years in settler colonial prisons he, alongside fellow nationalists who include the late Father Zimbabwe Cde Joshua Nkomo, remained unbowed and resolute, eventually escaping from the then Rhodesia in 1974 in order to lead and guide the resumption and escalation of our war of liberation at a time of its tragic setbacks and paralysis,” said President Mnangagwa.

He said under former President Mugabe, the struggle regained momentum and consolidated the Patriotic Front into a formidable coordinated national liberation movement that waged a gruelling and protracted struggle in the Southern Africa region.

President Mnangagwa added that the freedom being enjoyed in the country since 1980, was because of sacrifices of a generation of nationalists and freedom fighters pre-dating the 1960s, who included the late Mugabe.

“A great teacher and mentor, the bitterness of long spells in incarceration and anguish of a brutal and bitter war, never extinguished Cde Mugabe’s forgiving inner humanity,” said President Mnangagwa.

“That humanity shone and undiminished throughout that season of war and forcefully asserted itself by way of the signature policy of national reconciliation on which our whole Statehood was founded and built. Through that policy of forgiveness Southern African politics took a definitive shift towards a just, post-colonial multiracial harmony, which would be replicated elsewhere in our region and beyond.

“He thus wrote a lasting page on nation-building and statecraft for the world, making him stand out as such a remarkable statesman of our century.”

President Mnangagwa said the late former President would also be remembered for post-independence transformations in areas of rights, education and social services for the hitherto marginalised black Zimbabweans including the bold and historic land reform programme.

“Through this programme, indigenous Zimbabweans regained their long denied land rights, to complete their sovereignty. For that he was especially vilified, shunned and punished by those who stood to lose from an end to colonial ‘rights’ and from a just reassertion of African rights.

“With characteristic defiance, he stood firm and undaunted, resolutely pressing on with the land reform programme to completion, all against formidable odds which included punitive sanctions and other reprisals that followed and which still dog us to this day.

“Today Zimbabwe’s land question, itself a principal grievance of our struggle, stands fully and irrevocably addressed and resolved. History will remember him for this bold move,” he said.

President Mnangagwa said Government remained committed to carry forward former President Mugabe’s aspirations.

“As we mourn the passing on of our commander, liberator, founder and leader, we remain determined to carry forward the transformation so fervently desired, including the transformation, including protecting and defending the gains of the struggle for which he made huge sacrifices.

“On the bedrock and solid foundation for the First Republic which he moulded as its leader, we today recover and grow our economy, brick by brick until his lifelong vision of an empowered people is realised,” said President Mnangagwa.

The President extended his “deepest, heartfelt condolences to former First Lady Grace Mugabe, the Mugabe family and the children “on this their saddest loss”.

“Amai Mugabe stood by her husband to the very end, thus imparting to our nation a lasting lesson on devout love and care. For that we deeply thank her, as we join her in the grief and loss and bereavement which is also ours to feel and bear,” he said.

Father Mukonori Leads Churches In Mourning Mugabe

Father Mukonori


State Media|Spiritual adviser to the late Robert Gabriel Mugabe Father Fidelis Mukonori of the Roman Catholic Church has described the former president’s death as a great loss to the nation. This comes as other churches also paid their condolences following the death of the liberation icon in Singapore yesterday at the age of 95.

Father Mukonori said Mugabe was a believer in God.

“He believed in God and may his soul rest in peace,” he said.

“He was 95 years old, and he has rested. Cde Mugabe was the founding father of Zimbabwe, the founder of nationalism in Zimbabwe and the foundation of the nation.

“We thank him for the role he played in the liberation of Zimbabwe. Our hearts are heavy, we are mourning,’’ he said.

THE Zimbabwe Council of Churches (ZCC) also described the former president as a liberation icon who played an important role in shaping the history of Zimbabwe.

In a statement yesterday, ZCC general secretary Rev Kenneth Mtata said Mugabe’s call for reconciliation in his inauguration speech in 1980 gave hope that Zimbabweans would work together and transcend the racial and ethnic divide.

“In mourning RGM, the nation stands at the ambivalence of the man who together with other liberation heroes oversaw the liberation struggle for the independence of Zimbabwe,” he said.

“He showed determination, tenacity and principle during the Lancaster House negotiations.

“The early years of his rule were marked by the exponential growth and development of primary and secondary education, which firmly set Zimbabwe’s education system among the best on the continent. He also championed a robust primary health system across the country.

“He boldly addressed the outstanding land question through the contentious land reform programme, whose intention was to give land back to the landless black majority. These milestones must be celebrated.”

Union for the Development of Apostolic Churches in Zimbabwe Africa (UDACIZA), an umbrella body for Apostolic and Zionist churches also sent its condolences.

“We have lost an icon, a hero and Zimbabwe’s founding father who played a critical role in the liberation of the country,” said Rev Edson Tsvakayi.

Mugabe’s Life In Pictures

Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe arrives for the burial of a prominent member of his party, Misheck Chando, in Harare. On Friday, Sept. 6, 2019, Zimbabwe President Emmerson Mnangagwa said his predecessor Robert Mugabe, age 95, has died.
Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe addresses party supporters at a rally in Gweru, about 250 kms. (155 miles) south of Harare. On Friday, Sept. 6, 2019, Zimbabwe President Emmerson Mnangagwa said his predecessor Robert Mugabe, age 95, has died.
Zimbabwe’s President Robert Mugabe, center, arrives to preside over a student graduation ceremony at Zimbabwe Open University on the outskirts of Harare, Zimbabwe. On Friday, Sept. 6, 2019, Zimbabwe President Emmerson Mnangagwa said his predecessor Robert Mugabe, age 95, has died.
Zimbabwe’s President Robert Mugabe officiates at a student graduation ceremony at Zimbabwe Open University on the outskirts of Harare, Zimbabwe. On Friday, Sept. 6, 2019, Zimbabwe President Emmerson Mnangagwa said his predecessor Robert Mugabe, age 95, has died.
Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe, left, shakes hands with Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai after he signed the new constitution into law at State house in Harare. On Friday, Sept. 6, 2019, Zimbabwe President Emmerson Mnangagwa said his predecessor Robert Mugabe, age 95, has died.
Former Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe, left, and his wife Grace pose for a photo after a press conference at their residence in Harare. On Friday, Sept. 6, 2019, Zimbabwe President Emmerson Mnangagwa said his predecessor Robert Mugabe, age 95, has died.
Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe, lights a flame at celebrations to mark 32 years of independence of Zimbabwe, in Harare. On Friday, Sept. 6, 2019, Zimbabwe President Emmerson Mnangagwa said his predecessor Mugabe, age 95, has died.
Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe clenches his fists as he delivers his speech at his party’s 13th annual conference, in Gweru about 250 Kilometres south west of the capital Harare. On Friday, Sept. 6, 2019, Zimbabwe President Emmerson Mnangagwa said his predecessor Mugabe, age 95, has died.
Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe during a meeting with South African President Jacob Zuma at the Presidential Guesthouse in Pretoria, South Africa. On Friday, Sept. 6, 2019, Zimbabwe President Emmerson Mnangagwa said his predecessor Robert Mugabe, age 95, has died.
Leaders of the Black National Front Joshua Nkomo, left, and Robert Mugabe make a no progress statement after their informal meeting with British chairman Ivor Richard at the Palais of Nations, Geneva, Switzerland. On Friday, Sept. 6, 2019, Zimbabwe President Emmerson Mnangagwa said his predecessor Mugabe, age 95, has died.
Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe addresses people at an event before the closure of his party’s 16th Annual Peoples Conference in Masvingo, south of the capital Harare. On Friday, Sept. 6, 2019, Zimbabwe President Emmerson Mnangagwa said his predecessor Mugabe, age 95, has died.

Trail Of Events The Day Mugabe Passed On.

September 06, 2019

8:15 p.m.

Zimbabwe’s presidential spokesman provided details about former leader Robert Mugabe’s final hours and death at a Singapore hospital.

George Charamba says Mugabe was complaining of chest pains when he was readmitted to the hospital. Mugabe’s personal doctor was with him when he died at 4:45 a.m. on Friday. Charamba told The Associated Press: “When the doctors realized the gravity of Mugabe’s condition, they requested that his personal doctor be present, and he was flown to Singapore.”

7:00 p.m.

Zimbabwe’s president has declared former President Robert Mugabe a national hero, the country’s highest posthumous honor.

President Emmerson Mnangagwa said the African country would observe an official mourning period until Mugabe is buried; he didn’t say when the funeral would take place.

Mnangagwa announced on Friday that Mugabe died in Singapore at age 95. He didn’t say when the body would return to Zimbabwe.

He thanked Singapore for “unmatched hospitality and medical care they extended to our leader up to the very end”

Mnangagwa was a long-time loyalist until Mugabe fired him from his Cabinet in 2017. He called Mugabe “a great teacher and mentor” and a “remarkable statesman of our century.”

5:25 p.m.

Amnesty International says that Robert Mugabe, who led Zimbabwe for almost four decades, left behind “an indelible stain on his country’s human rights record.”

Mugabe died on Friday at the age of 95, two years after being forced to give up power.

The human rights group said Mugabe’s early years as a leader saw “notable achievements” through his heavy investment in health care and education. But the group said he later eroded his own track record, citing the harassment and killings of political opponents under his leadership.

Muleya Mwananyanda, Amnesty International’s Deputy Regional Director for Southern Africa, said: “While casting himself as the saviour of Zimbabwe, Robert Mugabe inflicted lasting damage upon its people and its reputation.”

4:45 p.m.

A human rights activist is remembering Zimbabwe’s longtime leader Robert Mugabe as a tyrant who killed more black Africans than even the apartheid regime in South Africa.

Peter Tatchell, who is British, also said it was sad that the strongman died without ever facing justice.

Tatchell twice attempted to carry out a citizens’ arrest of Mugabe on charges of torture and other human rights abuses, in 1999 and 2001, but they were unsuccessful.

Mugabe died Friday in Singapore at the age of 95. An ex-guerrilla chief, Mugabe took power after independence from white minority rule in 1980 and presided over a country whose early promise was eroded by economic turmoil and allegations of human rights violations.

Tatchell said: “Robert Mugabe was a liberation hero who turned tyrant. He massacred more black Africans than even the evil apartheid regime in South Africa.”

3 p.m.

Zimbabwe’s opposition leader says he is “mourning with the rest of Africa” over the death of former president Robert Mugabe but also acknowledged the pain that the country faced over “decades of political disputes” surrounding his governance.

The former leader of Zimbabwe was forced to resign in 2017 after a 37-year rule whose early promise was eroded by economic turmoil, disputed elections and human rights violations. He died on Friday at age 95.

Speaking on Friday, Nelson Chamisa, the leader of Zimbabwe’s opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) gave his condolences to the family of Mugabe.

He acknowledged Mugabe’s place as one of Zimbabwe’s founding fathers, but also referred to problems of human rights in Zimbabwe and the “deficits of governance” during his years of rule.

2:30 p.m.

Kenya’s president has ordered flags lowered to half-staff following the death of Zimbabwe’s longtime ruler Robert Mugabe.

President Uhuru Kenyatta said that the period of national mourning would run from dawn on Saturday until sunset on Monday and would involve flags lowered at all public buildings and military posts.

He called it a “mark of respect for the memory of this African hero and friend of our country.”

1:35 p.m.

The president of Kenya is mourning the death of Zimbabwe’s longtime leader Robert Mugabe and recalling him as an African freedom fighter.

Uhuru Kenyatta said that Kenyans will remember Mugabe as “a man of courage.” Mugabe died in a hospital in Singapore on Friday at the age of 95.

Kenyatta described Mugabe in a statement as “an elder statesman, a freedom fighter and a Pan-Africanist who played a major role in shaping the interests of the African continent.”

He said his thoughts and prayers went out to Mugabe’s family, relatives and the people of Zimbabwe, “who, for many years, he served with commitment and dedication.”

1:15 p.m.

Singapore’s Foreign Ministry says it is working with the Embassy of Zimbabwe to fly the body of Robert Mugabe home to Zimbabwe for burial following the death of the former African leader.

Mugabe died at the age of 95 on Friday in the Gleneagles Hospital in the wealthy southeast Asian city-state of Singapore, where he had received treatment in recent years.

A spokesperson for Singapore’s Foreign Ministry also expressed condolences on Mugabe’s death.

12:30 p.m.

The former president of Congo, Joseph Kabila, has paid homage to Robert Mugabe, the longtime former leader of Zimbabwe who died on Friday.

Kabila said: “The entire continent has just lost one of the great panafricanists, the lineage of the heroes of the struggle for independence.”

Congo and Zimbabwe once enjoyed very close ties, and Mugabe provided critical military support to the government of Kabila’s father, Laurent Kabila, in 1998, when Rwandan troops were at the doorstep of Congo’s capital Kinshasa.

In his statement, Kabila said: “We will forever remember the worthy son of Africa, who flew to the rescue of our country, then a victim of external aggression.”

12 p.m.

China has called Zimbabwe’s late Robert Mugabe a “prominent leader” who firmly defended the country’s sovereignty.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang said Friday that China deeply mourns Mugabe’s death. Geng said the former president opposed foreign interference and actively promoted China’s relations with Zimbabwe and Africa at large.

Mugabe ended his 37-year rule with a forced resignation in 2017. The early promise of his leadership was eroded by economic turmoil, disputed elections and human rights violations.

His successor, President Emmerson Mnangagwa, confirmed Mugabe’s death at 95 on Friday.

11:15

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa confirmed that Mugabe died in Singapore in a statement sending condolences on behalf of the government and people of South Africa.

He called Mugabe Zimbabwe’s first post-independence president and said: “Under President Mugabe’s leadership, Zimbabwe’s sustained and valiant struggle against colonialism inspired our own struggle against apartheid and built in us the hope that one day South Africa too would be free.”

He also acknowledged Mugabe’s role in “advancing regional solidarity, integration and development through Zimbabwe’s participation in the Southern African Development Community.”

10:00 a.m.

The Gleneagles Hospital in the wealthy southeast Asian city-state of Singapore, where former Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe has received treatment in recent years, sent a statement of condolence on his passing.

The hospital’s parent company, Parkway Pantai, says in an emailed statement, “We are saddened by the news of the passing of Mr Robert Mugabe” and expresses its condolences to his family and loved ones.

It says it cannot give further information “out of respect for the privacy of Mr Mugabe and his family.”

The hospital would not confirm that he was being treated there at the time of his death Friday.

8:50 a.m.

Robert Mugabe, the former leader of Zimbabwe forced to resign in 2017 after a 37-year rule whose early promise was eroded by economic turmoil, disputed elections and human rights violations, has died. He was 95.

His successor President Emmerson Mnangagwa confirmed Mugabe’s death in a tweet Friday, mourning him as an “icon of liberation.” He did not provide details.

“Cde (Comrade) Mugabe was an icon of liberation, a pan-Africanist who dedicated his life to the emancipation and empowerment of his people. His contribution to the history of our nation and continent will never be forgotten. May his soul rest in eternal peace,” Mnangagwa said.

Mugabe, who took power after white minority rule ended in 1980, blamed Zimbabwe’s economic problems on international sanctions and once said he wanted to rule for life.

But growing discontent about the southern African country’s fractured leadership and other problems prompted a military intervention, impeachment proceedings by the parliament and large street demonstrations for his removal.

Is Mnangagwa Rigging President Mugabe’s Death?

Grace Mugabe Spotted At Singapore Funeral Parlour

Grace Mugabe covered in blue, leaving a funeral parlour where her husband’s body is being kept.

Daily Mail|Grace Mugabe covered her face as she left a funeral parlour in Singapore on Friday following the death of her husband who passed away aged 95.

Grace was dressed in black with a blue shawl covering her head.

Grace kept her profile low as she slipped out of Gleaneagle’s Hospital after her husband passed away at 10.40am Singapore time.

Later the family, including Mugabe’s daughter and a woman believed to be Grace’s sister, attended the chapel of rest funeral parlour Singapore Casket to pay their respects.

One onlooker said: ‘She is best known in this country for showing off her designer clothes and been seen in the best shops.

‘It was all different for today, but I was surprised that she hid her face. Maybe the pain is too much for her she just doesn’t want to share it.” Daily Mail

We Wasted Countless Opportunities -Antipas

WARRIORS caretaker coach Joey Antipas believes his team could have avoided the humiliation of losing to lightweights Somalia had they taken their chances and trained as a group ahead of the match.


The Warriors made history for all the wrong reason on Thursday when they became the first team to lose to the Somali Ocean Stars in a World Cup qualifier following a 0-1 defeat in Djibouti.


The East Africans had also been winless in 31 games — World Cup/AFCON/friendlies — since the turn of the millennium.


Their last positive result had been a draw exactly 10 years ago.
But, they changed all that on Thursday with a victory that cheered the globe as their win made headlines across the world.


“We missed a host of chances and became desperate as the game went on and Somalia were dangerous on the counter attack,’’ said Antipas.


“Elvis (Chipezeze) kept us in the game with a good double save.
“The pitch was artificial and hard and to compound to our woes, we did not have a single session together due to the hectic travel arrangements.’’


The Warriors went down to the world’s lowest ranked team.
However, Antipas and his men still have a chance to redeem themselves when they host the Ocean Stars at the National Sports Stadium in the reverse tie on Tuesday.State media

Joey Antipas

Young Warriors Humiliated!

IF you are a Zimbabwean football fan, this is probably as close to what hell feels like as possible.

What a week it has been, humiliation on all fronts as if football — the world’s most beautiful game — is on an agenda to remind us of its other ugly side which rears its head when you take this game for granted.


Never before in the history of Zimbabwean football has a week been as bad as what the last six days have delivered for this country — embarrassment, indignity, shame, disgrace, ignominy, comeuppance and torture for the game’s long-suffering fans.


First, it was that Mighty Warriors’ no-show at the National Sports Stadium, the first team to fail to fulfil a home international fixture in the history of this game.


Then, it was followed by the Warriors’ shock and embarrassing loss to the weakest nation in the world — Somalia — a homeless team that had never won a World Cup qualifier in their history before and never tasted a win in an international game since the turn of the millennium.


Last night, as if this script is being written by the Devil himself, it fittingly ended in humiliating fashion at the Orlando Stadium in Johannesburg when the Young Warriors crashed to a 0-5 defeat at the hands of their South African counterparts in the AFCON Under-23 third round, first leg qualifier.


With a ticket to the AFCON Under-23 finals in Egypt at stake, the South Africans brought some of their heavy hitters, led by their Europe-based forwards Luther Singh, who plays for Portuguese side Braga, Lyle Foster, who plays for French side Monaco and Kobamelo Kodisang, who is on the books of Portuguese side Sanjoanense.


And, with the trio well-supported by the highly-rated SuperSport United duo of Teboho Mokoena and Sipho Mbule, from midfield, the Young Warriors were no match and were already down by three goals at the interval.


Foster teed up Kodisang for the first goal after 17 minutes, Singh doubled their lead in the 35th minute and Mokoena added the third just before the break with a powerful shot.
After the break, Singh made it four and Foster completed the rout.


It could, or should have been six, with 10 minutes remaining when Foster was presented with a golden chance for his brace after being picked out by Kamohelo Mahlatsi, but his header went wide.State media

IS MNANGAGWA USING LEO MUGABE TO RIG PRESIDENT BOB’S FUNERAL?

Mnangagwa Declares Days Of Mourning Mugabe

Former President Robert Gabriel Mugabe (95), who died in Singapore early yesterday morning, has been declared a national hero.

Mnangagwa — who cut short his trip to South Africa where he was attending the World Economic Forum (WEF) — announced the national hero status while addressing the media at State House in Harare yesterday evening.


Earlier, the ruling Zanu-PF had met at an extraordinary session at the party’s headquarters in Harare to deliberate on the former leader’s status.


“Zanu-PF, which the late departed helped found, has met and accorded him national hero status which he earned and richly deserves,” eulogised Mnangagwa.


“Let me also register the gratitude of Government and the entire nation to the Government and people of the Republic of Singapore for the unmatched hospitality and medical care they extended to our leader up to the very end.


“In particular, we are most grateful to the team of medical experts and support staff which cared for him with such great diligence, dedication and compassion. They did all they could up to the very end.”


He also declared days of national mourning until the former President’s burial.
“As we await the arrival of the remains of our dear departed icon, we pray that the good Lord grant him mercies, putting his dear soul to eternal rest.


“We as Zimbabweans declare days of mourning of our leader until he is buried,” he said.


The President added that the death of former President Mugabe had left a void in the nation and a legacy of adherence to the rights of Africans.State media

Mugabe Was A Devout Believer -Mukonori

Spiritual adviser to the late Robert Gabriel Mugabe Father Fidelis Mukonori of the Roman Catholic Church has described the former president’s death as a great loss to the nation.

This comes as other churches also paid their condolences following the death of the liberation icon in Singapore yesterday at the age of 95.

Father Mukonori said Mugabe was a believer in God.

“He believed in God and may his soul rest in peace,” he said.
“He was 95 years old, and he has rested.

Mugabe was the founding father of Zimbabwe, the founder of nationalism in Zimbabwe and the foundation of the nation.

“We thank him for the role he played in the liberation of Zimbabwe. Our hearts are heavy, we are mourning,’’ he said.

THE Zimbabwe Council of Churches (ZCC) also described the former president as a liberation icon who played an important role in shaping the history of Zimbabwe.

In a statement yesterday, ZCC general secretary Rev Kenneth Mtata said Mugabe’s call for reconciliation in his inauguration speech in 1980 gave hope that Zimbabweans would work together and transcend the racial and ethnic divide.

“In mourning RGM, the nation stands at the ambivalence of the man who together with other liberation heroes oversaw the liberation struggle for the independence of Zimbabwe,” he said.

“He showed determination, tenacity and principle during the Lancaster House negotiations.

“The early years of his rule were marked by the exponential growth and development of primary and secondary education, which firmly set Zimbabwe’s education system among the best on the continent.

He also championed a robust primary health system across the country.

“He boldly addressed the outstanding land question through the contentious land reform programme, whose intention was to give land back to the landless black majority. These milestones must be celebrated.”State media

Robert Mugabe

World Leaders Mourn Mugabe

World leaders mourned former President Robert Gabriel Mugabe who died in Singapore yesterday morning, describing him as a true pan-Africanist and liberation fighter.


He was 95.
Mugabe attended the formation of the then Organisation of African Unity in 1963, now African Union (AU) as an invitee.


AU chairperson Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, who is also the President of Egypt, said: ‘‘It is with immense sadness that I learnt of the passing of Zimbabwe’s former President Robert Mugabe. My sincere condolences to his family and the Zimbabwean people as we mourn an iconic liberation fighter, pan-Africanist in the struggle for liberation and continental integration.’’


China, through its foreign Ministry spokesperson Geng Shuang, said Mugabe was an outstanding liberation movement leader and statesman who defended his country’s independence, opposed foreign interference and promoted good cooperation with China.


China is Zimbabwe’s all-weather friend.
“We are deeply saddened by his passing and express sincere sympathies to the Zimbabwean people, Government and to Mr Mugabe’s family,” he said.


President Cyril Ramaphosa of South Africa mourned the passing on of Mugabe and said he inspired South Africa’s struggle against apartheid and instilled hope that one day South Africa too would be free.


“South Africans join the people and Government of Zimbabwe in mourning the passing of a liberation fighter and champion of Africa’s cause against colonialism.


“Under President Mugabe’s leadership, Zimbabwe’s sustained and valiant struggle against colonialism inspired our own struggle against apartheid and built in us the hope that one day South Africa too would be free,’’ he said.


“During the decades of our own struggle, Zimbabwe’s liberation movement supported our own liberation movement to fight oppression on multiple fronts.


“After Zimbabwe achieved independence, the apartheid state brutalised and violated Zimbabwe as punishment for supporting our own struggle,’’ he added.


Namibian President Hage Geingob, who is the immediate past SADC Chair, weighed in and said Namibians owed Mugabe a debt of gratitude.


“As Namibians, we owe President Mugabe a deep sense of gratitude for his immense and selfless contribution to the liberation of our country …The loss of the people of Zimbabwe.


Meanwhile, Kenyan President
Uhuru Kenyatta declared three days of mourning the death of former Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe (95) and ordered flags in that country to be flown at half-mast beginning today up to Monday.State media

Mugabe Was My Advisor -Peter Ndlovu

LEGENDARY former Warriors captain Peter Ndlovu has revealed how he used to consult former President Robert Mugabe whenever he wanted to make a move in his illustrious footballing carrier.

Mugabe died yesterday at the age of 95 in a hospital in Singapore where he was receiving treatment.
And, as tributes continue to pour from across the world, Zimbabwe’s most successful captain Ndlovu said he always wanted to give his iconic Warriors jersey Number 12 to the late former President.


“Today (yesterday) is indeed a very sad day for us, Zimbabwe, Africa and the world,’’ King Peter said.
“We have lost our father, leader, friend, hero and an icon. In simpler terms, we have lost a legend. I would like to appreciate what he (Mugabe) did for me as an individual and the pivotal roles he played in advising me, and my former manager Winston Makamure, throughout my footballing career and life in general.


“I never moved to any club without consulting him as a father, to have an input.”


The Mamelodi Sundowns manager had in previous interviews pledged to hand over one of his Warriors shirt to the late former President.


“As per the promise that I made to the world in one of my interviews, which was to be carried in a BBC documentary in which I said my Number 12 special shirt that I wore with pride and joy, would only part with me going Robert Gabriel Mugabe’s way, I would have loved to present it to him.


“I would have wanted to do that while he was still alive to show more respect. As people, unfortunately, only appreciate and honour people when they are gone.


“However, I will make means to have access, through the family, to present this shirt. I would also appeal to fellow legends to help me out.


“May his soul rest in eternal peace and may his family, wife Grace and the kids, be consoled in Jesus’ name and may the Almighty God lay his healing Hands upon you all and the whole world to be able to deal with this sad loss.”State media

Robert Mugabe

FC Platinum Keen To Reclaim Top Spot

FC PLATINUM have the chance to reclaim top spot when they take on Herentals at the National Sports Stadium in a rescheduled Castle Lager Premiership football tie tomorrow.

The Norman Mapeza-coached team are fourth on the log with 36 points in 21 matches, three behind leaders ZPC Kariba, who have played a game more.

But the Zvishavane-based side could climb back to the summit if they find a way past Herentals tomorrow.

The defending champions are playing in the CAF Champions League where they have already booked a place in the first round.

And fatigue seems to be getting the better of them as they haven’t been doing well in the league.

They have collected just a single point in their last three games.

And Herentals coach Kumbirai Mutiwekuziva, whose side is also struggling, says his charges should take full advantage of the defending champions’ slump in form.State media

Whatever Happened During Mugabe’s Last Days Should Not Be Used To Tarnish His Image -Army General


Commander Zimbabwe Defence Forces General Philip Valerio Sibanda has said whatever happened during former President Robert Mugabe’s last days should not be used to tarnish all the good he did for the nation.

Philip Valerio Sibanda


Gen Sibanda said this as he sent the Zimbabwe Defence Forces (ZDF) condolence message to the Mugabe family, the Zimbabwean population and the whole African continent, following the death of Mugabe yesterday morning.


In an interview with the media at Robert Gabriel Mugabe International Airport, Gen Sibanda said Mugabe played his part during the liberation struggle.


“It is a very sad day indeed for Zimbabwe Defence Forces and Zimbabwe in general. I received the news early this morning.


“He played his part in the liberation of this country and in moving this country from colonialism at Independence to where we are today.


“Whatever happened towards the end of his leadership should not be used to rubbish the good things that he did during his life,” said Gen Sibanda.State media

Lungu Pays Tribute To Mugabe

Farai Dziva|Zambian President Edgar Lungu has described former President of the Republic of Zimbabwe, Robert Mugabe as a true legend.

Lungu shared a photo of him and the late former President Mugabe on Facebook.

“I am saddened at the passing of a Pan-Africanist, Zimbabwe’s founding father and former President, Cde Robert Mugabe.

He will be remembered for his fight for Africa’s liberation and standing up to fearlessly defend a continent he loved the most. His place in the annals of Africa’s political history is well assured.
Zambia mourns with the people of Zimbabwe.

Go well, Son of Africa.
Go well, Son of the Soil.
RIPRobertMugabe,”posted Lungu.

ANC Mourns Mugabe

Farai Dziva|ANC has released a statement on the death of the former President of Zimbabwe Robert Mugabe.

In the statement on Friday ANC Secretary General Ace Magashule said:

“In his Independence Day speech delivered on March 6, 1957, the father of Ghana’s independence, Kwame Nkrumah delivered the rousing words that went on to nourish and sustain the hopes of all Africans who at the time yearned for independence and self-determination.

‘We have awakened..we will not sleep anymore. Today, from now on, there is a new African in the world.

“The new Africa is ready to fight his own battles and show that after all, the black man is capable of managing his own affairs.”

Magashule said the life of Mugabe came to epitomise the “new African” – who having shrugged off the colonial yoke, would strive to ensure his country took its rightful place amongst the community of nations: firmly in charge of its own destiny.

“The revolutionary struggle of Zanu-PF was an inspiration to the then-banned and suppressed African National Congress (ANC) who was fighting the apartheid government in South Africa.

“Robert Mugabe’s Zanu-PF has over the years been a longstanding friend and supporter of the African National Congress (ANC), from the exile years through to democracy. Our fraternal relations, grounded in the mutual aspirations of human rights, political dignity and social justice – have endured over the years…

“To the Mugabe family, we extend our heartfelt condolences. To our friends in Zanu-PF be comforted that you have lost a leader whose service to his country will forever be inscribed. We mourn with you the passing of our friend, statesman, leader, revolutionary.

Evan Mawarire Speaks On Mugabe Death

Farai Dziva|Evan Mawarire has said nobody can stop his or her sun from setting.

Mawarire of #Thisflag was commenting on former President Robert Mugabe’s death.

He said:”In 2016 Mugabe threatened to have me killed-my response-“There are many things you have the power to do to us Mr President, but there are 2 things you have no power to stop.

You cannot stop your sun from setting & you cannot stop mine from rising” Your sun has set Robert. Goodbye.”

Evan Mawarire

Police Jailed For Shooting A Suspect

A 28-year old police officer has been sentenced to seven years in prison for shooting a suspect on the leg.

The victim, who is allegedly facing an attempted murder charge, is now disabled after his leg was amputated to save his life.

Tatenda Manyaira, who is stationed at ZRP Charandura, appeared yesterday before Gweru Regional Magistrate Mrs Phathekile Msipa facing one count of attempted murder.

He was convicted despite pleading not guilty. Mrs Msipa handed him a seven-year prison sentence before conditionally suspending one year.

The magistrate said Manyaira should not have used excessive force on a co-operating suspect.

“You shot the complainant who was unarmed and cooperating with the police. You are sentenced to seven years in prison of which one year is suspended on condition you don’t commit a similar offence in the next five years,” Mrs Msipa said.

It was the State case that on May 13 last year at about 12PM, Manyaira was on duty looking for the complainant, Aspicious Kangwara, who was a wanted person for attempted murder.

While at Chimona Milling Centre gate, the court heard that Kangwara was approached by Manyaira who was in the company of three other police officers; Givemore Chirangande, Mbongeni Lupahla, Daniel Mahoko and a member of the Neighbourhood Watch Committee, Michael Shereni.

Chirangande was armed with an FN rifle with a magazine loaded with 16 rounds. The court heard that Manyaira and the other officers had with them five other people whom they had arrested for allegedly refusing to divulge Kangwara’s whereabouts.

The court heard that Mahoko approached Kangwara and inquired why he was quarrelling with Manyaira.

Kangwara told him that Manyaira was demanding a bribe from him. Manyaira told the court that he then took the FN rifle from Chirangande and instructed Kangwara to raise his hands and he complied.

The court heard that Manyaira fired a shot at Kangwara, hitting him on the right leg above the knee cap.

Kangwara sustained a bullet wound resulting in his leg being amputated. The matter was reported to the police leading to his arrest.

Mr Kelvin Guvheya appearing for the State condemned police brutality and indicated that the court should send a message to society that violence and brutality have no place in society. Chronicle

ZCTU Condemns Xenophobic Attacks In SA

The Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU) is seriously disturbed by the unfortunate resurgence of xenophobic attacks on foreign nationals by South Africans that are spreading across the country’s towns and cities.


What is most disturbing is the lukewarm response by the South African authorities in protecting the foreign nationals, most of whom are economic refugees eking out an honest living.


South Africa has an obligation to uphold Article 3 (a) and (f) of the Constitutive Act of the African Union, which encourages greater unity and solidarity between African States and African people, as well as the promotion of peace, security and stability on the continent.


The gruesome attacks on the foreigners call for urgent action, not lip service from authorities in Pretoria, who also have an obligation to protect foreigners under international law.


As a member of Southern Africa Development Community (SADC), South African authorities are aware of the provisions of the SADC Treaty Article 5.2(d) that encourages the “elimination of all obstacles to free movement of capital and labour, goods and services and of the people of the region generally among member states,” as well as the SADC Protocol on the Facilitation of Movement of Persons signed on 18 August 2005, of which it is a signatory.


Migrant workers in South Africa are largely not there by choice but because of difficult conditions in their respective countries, conditions which were created by poor governance, which should be a collective responsibility of all African nations.


It is painful to note that most of those under siege in South Africa are workers who were retrenched as companies closed down due to bad policies by their governments. However, some are honest business people contributing greatly to the South African economy.


We also note that during the last attacks in 2008,2015 and 2017 the South African authorities did very little to investigate and bring to book the culprits. This lack of political will resulted in the perpetrators believing that they can repeat xenophobic acts with impunity.


South Africa’s success and independence is because of migrant labour and the sacrifice of frontline states in the fight against apartheid. Since time immemorial, migrant labour has been part and parcel of Southern Africa. What is happening now is highly unfortunate and a dangerous attack on Pan Africanism.


Article 4 of the African Charter states that “human beings are inviolable. Every human being shall be entitled to respect for his life and the integrity of his person. No one may be arbitrarily deprived of this right”.
The ZCTU is worried by claims by the malcontents that migrants deal in drugs and prostitution as justification for the attacks. It is the work of the police to root out criminals not for people to take the law into their hands. The ZCTU is of the firm belief that these are just flimsy justifications by criminals with deep hatred for fellow Africans and are now making it an annual festival to torture and butcher foreign nationals.

ZCTU firmly believes that it is high time SADC and the African Union enforce governance protocols so that nations can be held accountable for violations against their own citizens and foreign nationals to avoid future disturbances.
We also call upon the South African government to put in place practical policies that safeguard migrants and bring a lasting solution to the ever resurfacing xenophobic attacks.

Japhet Moyo
SECRETARY GENERAL

To Some Mugabe Was A Liberator While To Others He Was A Dictator. ..

Farai Dziva|There are conflicting views on the passing of former President of Zimbabwe Robert Gabriel Mugabe.

While some say Mugabe was a legend some believe he was responsible for the economic meltdown in the country.

Sadc.org has compiled a brief excerpt about Mugabe’s life:

Mugabe was born on February 21, 1924 in Kutama, formerly known as Southern Rhodesia.

The late politician ruled Zimbabwe for 37 years through controversial elections but his party forced him to resign in November 2017.

He also reluctantly accepted a power-sharing agreement with opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) in 2008, overseen by the Southern African Development Community (SADC) and brokered by then South African president Thabo Mbeki.

To some Mugabe was a liberator while to others he was a ruthless dictator.

Some controversial aspects of his legacy were the massacre of more than 20,000 Ndebele civilians in an operation that become known as the Gukarakundi, various reforms that changed the constitution and tightened his grip on power, the seizure of land from white farmers; and massive economic upheaval that left Zimbabwe with the highest rate of inflation in the world.

ZimPapers Increases Prices Of Its Publications

By A Correspondent- Zimbabwe’s oldest newspaper publisher and commercial printer, Zimpapers has announced a 50 to 233% increase in the price of all its publications.

Fears abound that other publishers and printers including Alpha Media Holdings, which publishes the Newsday and Daily News would follow suit. This would be its second time since it increased prices earlier this year.

The development was argued to be a way for the publisher which has Herald, Chronicle, Sunday Mail, Business Weekly, Sunday News, H-Metro, B-METRO, Kwayedza, UMthunywa and Manica Post under its portfolio.

Below are the old and new prices.

The prices have been increased by between 50 and 233% with the highest increase being that of the

  • Sunday Mail from $2 to $10,
  • Business Weekly from $2 to $10,
  • H-Metro, from$1 to $2.
  • B-Metro, from$1 to $2.
  • Kwayedza, from$1 to $2.
  • UMthunywa from $1 to $2.
  • Manica Post from $1.50 to $3

The price increases will be effective from the 8th of September 2019.

The increase in prices comes at a time when prices of other commodities have been on the rise for over 24 months now.

Meanwhile, workers’ salaries have remained stagnant thereby creating a mismatch between their finances and the increased cost of living.-StateMedia

Mugabe Was Influenced By His Sidekicks To Stay In Power After Losing 2008 Presidential Election

Farai Dziva|The MDC has said former President of the Republic of Zimbabwe Robert Mugabe played a significant role in the liberation struggle.

See the full statement below :
The MDC notes with sadness the passing on of Zimbabwe’s founding leader, Mr. Robert Mugabe.

As a party that advances the ideals of the liberation struggle, we acknowledge Mr. Mugabe’s important role in laying the foundation of an independent Africa and an independent Zimbabwe.

Mr. Mugabe missed an opportunity of leading and leaving. He could have bowed out earlier and left the political scene in a more dignified manner than being stampeded out.

In 2008, Mr. Mugabe lost the election but he stayed on, through the influence of his sidekicks, some of whom have today become an albatross to the country.

We had our differences with him, particularly on the issue of respecting human rights and his failure to create a truly inclusive society that failed to place the country on a positive trajectory for growth.

In the true African value of ubuntu, we pay our condolences to the Mugabe family as we join the nation in mourning a founding African statesman.

May his soul rest in peace.

MDC Communications

FULL TEXT- “Mugabe’s Death Has Robbed Us”: Mthwakazi

The world and our organization, the 1893 Mthwakazi Human Rights Restoration Movement (1893 MHRRM), woke up to the news that Robert Gabriel Mugabe, the former President of Zimbabwe, who ruled Zimbabwe with an iron fist from 1980 to 2017, has died. 

Mugabe was one of the most barbaric, bloodthirsty and brute leaders Africa has ever produced. He ranks alongside Idi Amin Dada of Uganda, Mobuto Sese  Seko of DRC formerly Zaire, Kamuzu Banda of Malawi, Mengistu Haile Mariam of Ethopia, Hissene Habre of Chad, Omar Al-bashir of Sudan, Siad Barre of Somalia, Macias Nguena of Guinea, Sekou Toure of Guinea, General Sani Abacha of Nigeria and Paul Biya of Cameron. Mugabe, like his mentioned odious peers, did not bless Africa. He ruined Africa. He destroyed the lives of many Africans in Zimbabwe.

For those not in the know, Robert Gabriel Mugabe and his brute disciple followers have a terrible human rights violations record that has bastardized and desecrated Africa’s ubuntu values, a quality that has essential values of compassion and humanity, with reckless abandon since Zimbabwe got independence in 1980. 

He and his gang of crime lovers committed one of the most heinous or hideous crimes against humanity in Africa, a genocide against the people of Matebeleland found in the southern-western parts of Zimbabwe.

Mugabe code-named the above mentioned genocide “Gukurahundi”, a Shona word meaning an early storm that washes away the chuff in its way. He enlisted the services of North Koreans in 1981, when he made a state visit there with his cdes including Mujuru, to train and arm a specialist brigade specifically for the purpose of committing a genocide against the Matebele. He named this storm-trooper brigade, the 5th Brigade of Zimbabwe and subsequently unleashed it to the unsuspecting Matebeles in 1983 to 1987, long after he already started killings and abductions of Matebele leaders and former Zipra and uMkhonto weSizwe war liberation fighters. 50 000 to 100 000 Matebeles died. Millions of the surviving victims of his senseless terror were displaced to neighbouring countries including South Africa and some to overseas countries.

It must be noted that the Matebele genocide was meticulously planned and implemented to the letter by Robert Gabriel Mugabe and his accomplices. As part of that meticulous planning, Robert Gabriel Mugabe and his brute and thuggish disciples, crafted a document they called The 1979 Shona Grand Plan before Zimbabwe gained independence in 1980. This well written and genocide blueprint document meticulously identified the Matebele and the Whites in Zimbabwe as foreigners and enemies of the state of Zimbabwe. They had to be gotten rid of violently so as to create a Shona ethnic monolithic super and one party state of Zimbabwe.

It must be said without equivocation or any form of fretting that Mugabe’s Grand Plan has become a political culture and a way of life for many in Zimbabwe particularly those in Mashonaland. It forms the basis of the way of thinking for Mugabe’s disciples and followers. Their world-view, which is often upside down, is informed by the 1979 Grand Plan and its distasteful and harmful teachings against the Matebele and indeed the whites in Zimbabwe. It is no wonder why the current Deputy Minister of Information in Zimbabwe, Energy Mutodi, issued a warped and twisted hate speech statement against the Matebele a few days ago stating that the Matebele are foreigners in Zimbabwe. He arrogantly warned and reminded South Africa that it has its own refugees in Zimbabwe in the form of the Matebele and therefore it should stop xenophobic attacks on its people. The unfit Minister gave an implied view that failure for South Africa to deal with xenophobic attacks might trigger xenophobic attacks against the Matebele as they are viewed as foreigners in Zimbabwe.

The said statement from this bumbling Minister, who is unfit to hold office in a normal and progressive state, emanates from the teachings of one Robert Gabriel Mugabe and his 1979 Shona Grand Plan teachings that regard the Matebele as not owners of Matebeleland but refugees in Zimbabwe and enemies of the state of Zimbabwe.

The kingpin and role model of such twisted teachings and statements is none other than Mugabe, a callous, hateful and genocidal figure in Africa who conquered and retained power for 37 years through hate speech. His rule was characterised by hate speech, brutality and shedding of blood wantonly. He elevated hate speech and rule by brutality to perfection, all centred on tribe and race to maintain his grip on power until the coup of 2017 when he turned on his most trusted lieutenants to annihilate them in an effort to prolong his rule.

Leading up to the coup in 2017, Mugabe turned his party, Zanu PF, into a night of long knives and a long day of poisoned ice creams as he sought to cordon off threats against his rule. He was eventually overthrown and whenever he appeared in the public, he showed signs of having lost the zest to live. None of his comrades in Africa came to his rescue. He was a lonely and discarded figure whose power had crumbled like a deck of cards.
It is regrettable that Robert Gabriel Mugabe has died without facing the long arm of the law for his gross crimes against humanity and for his genocide against the Matebeleland Nation in particular. He deserved to be stand in the dock and answer for his crimes.

Just in case some may forget. Robert Gabriel Mugabe is a man who was boastful about his brutal rule. He once boasted that he had “degrees in violence” and that he was a black “Hitler tenfold” of Africa. At some point he boasted about the fact he had died and resurrected many times than Jesus Christ himself. He certainly viewed himself as a deity, a god of some sort.

 Robert Gabriel Mugabe will be remembered as a callous man who brought misery to many especially in Matebeleland with his Genocide crusade against them. As Mugabe meets his maker in heaven this week, it must be pointed out fairly and squarely that he has left a legacy and culture of mass rapes, mass beatings, mass starvation, mass abductions, mass violence, mass killings and mass displacement of his surviving victims from Zimbabwe to other countries.

Today the displaced victims of his brutal rule face constant xenophobia attacks in South Africa and in other African countries.  He has left a legacy of black imperialism within Zimbabwe, a legacy of oppression and subjugation of one black Nation by the other. His legacy continues unabated with the current government that is in place.

In 1980 Mugabe emerged as a freedom fighter and in 2019 he has exited the world stage as a ruthless genocidal dictator who brought hell on earth to many in Africa. Gabriel became the angel of hope in 1980 and in 2019 exited the world stage as the angel of Death and Destruction. He is no hero. He is a zero.

Mugabe’s legacy will continue to be recorded and read in the annals of African and world history as that of an African leader who committed genocide and brought total mayhem and destruction to a promising African country called Zimbabwe. The effects of his brutal rule were felt beyond the borders of Zimbabwe and the consequences of his brutal rule remain with us today and for generations to come.

His brutish and odious Gukurahundi inspired murderous rule further brought mass destruction to infrastructure and mass destruction to a vibrant economy bequeathed to him by Rhodesians. Is it not shameful that Rhodesians left him something viable and he destroyed it in a twinkle of an eye, making blacks a mockery of the world?

Mugabe encouraged mass looting and corruption and chaotic policies that destroyed everything. Harare has become a sewage capital city of Zimbabwe today. The filth found in that town speaks volumes of the legacy of Mugabe in Zimbabwe. His chaotic rule further brought mass destruction to education institutions and mass destruction to healthcare institutions leading to mass deaths in the healthcare sector. For want of a better description, Mugabe committed education and healthcare genocide in Zimbabwe additional to the Matebele genocide he committed.

He destroyed lives en masse while spending billions of money on trips travelling abroad for shopping, personal health treatment and for useless engagements that did not bring any tangible benefits to the ordinary person in the country. His voracious appetite for travelling the world knew no boundaries, earning him the nickname, “The Vasco da Gama” of Africa. He mortgaged our resources to big international powers to save his skin from the enemies he created for himself. He was eccentric and an extremely self-centred and selfish person who thought speaking fluent English brought food on the table of many people he impoverished in Zimbabwe.

Our Movement and the surviving victims of Robert Gabriel Mugabe’s crimes against humanity cannot shed a tear for him. His death robed us of an opportunity to have him tried for the genocide he committed against the Matebele. We are of the opinion that he is not going to heaven. It is not that very often that we say such in Africa.

Released by the 1893 Mthwakazi Human Rights Restoration Movement Information and Publicity Department

MDC Statement On Robert Mugabe’s Death

Farai Dziva|The MDC has said former President of the Republic of Zimbabwe Robert Mugabe played a significant role in the liberation struggle.

See the full statement below :
The MDC notes with sadness the passing on of Zimbabwe’s founding leader, Mr. Robert Mugabe.

As a party that advances the ideals of the liberation struggle, we acknowledge Mr. Mugabe’s important role in laying the foundation of an independent Africa and an independent Zimbabwe.

Mr. Mugabe missed an opportunity of leading and leaving. He could have bowed out earlier and left the political scene in a more dignified manner than being stampeded out.

In 2008, Mr. Mugabe lost the election but he stayed on, through the influence of his sidekicks, some of whom have today become an albatross to the country.

We had our differences with him, particularly on the issue of respecting human rights and his failure to create a truly inclusive society that failed to place the country on a positive trajectory for growth.

In the true African value of ubuntu, we pay our condolences to the Mugabe family as we join the nation in mourning a founding African statesman.

May his soul rest in peace.

MDC Communications

R. G Mugabe Was A Corrupt And Murderous Dictator, Not A Hero – To All Dictators “Pidigori Waenda!” (Memento Mori!)

By Wilbert Mukori- The late Robert Gabriel Mugabe was a corrupt, incompetent and murderous dictator whose love of power and wealth was insatiable. Zimbabwe, the country and nation have paid dearly for his greed. Anyone saying Mugabe is a hero, a liar with no sense of shame, humanity or justice.

Mugabe was responsible for the death of over 30 000 innocent Zimbabweans in his fight to establish and retain his de facto one party, Zanu PF, dictatorship. His 37 years of corrupt and tyrannical rule has result in the total collapse of the country’s economy, a country that before independence was the breadbasket of the region is now dependent on food aid. Unemployment has soared to nauseating heights of 90% and been 80% plus for the last 20 years. The country’s basic services including health services have all but collapsed.

Robert Mugabe and his Zanu PF cronies betrayed the nation because Mugabe’s Zimbabwe is not what Zimbabweans, from the days of Mbuya Nehanda to the millions who have died since indirectly or otherwise, wanted.

Most of those singing Mugabe’s praise today are doing so because they benefited from the dictatorship or have been brainwashed into believing Mugabe can do no wrong!

Mugabe played a part in the liberation of Zimbabwe but only as mercenary, he had his eyes fixed on the price of being the country’s new lord and master after the white colonialists he was fighting. He did not care about freedom, human rights and not even the right to life. Only a first-class village idiot would call Mugabe a hero much less mourn the death of the corrupt and murderous dictator.

“Pidigori waenda, wanga achinyanya kuvhaira!”  (Pidigori (nickname for the bad one) has gone, he had become too boastful!) said Thomas Mapfumo in one of his songs, sung with Mugabe in mind!

Mugabe wanted to stay in power for live and hand over power to his wife Grace. Power was wrestled from him by his fellow Zanu PF cronies led by none other his henchman in chief, Emmerson Mnangagwa, in the military coup in November 2017.

It is said Mugabe died a bitter man and his dying wish was that he did not want to be buried at the National Heroes Acre and have Mnangagwa and other November coup gangsters pontificating over his died body. Most Zimbabweans could not care less, they have the economic mess and political paralysis he has left behind to worry about.  

The greatest regret for the nation is that they had failed to dismantle the Zanu PF dictatorship during Mugabe’s life-time – if that would have accelerated the dictator and many of those around him deaths that would have been a bonus.

Dismantling the Zanu PF dictatorship still remains the greatest challenge to Zimbabwe’s very survival. As long as Zimbabwe remains a pariah state ruled by corrupt, incompetent, vote rigging and murderous thugs; there will be no meaningful economic recovery.

Being sentimental over the death of a murderous dictator is simply a luxury that Zimbabweans can ill afford particularly when the dictatorship itself is alive and thriving! It will only encourage the sitting dictators and those to follow to believe the nation will worship them regardless their reign of terror!

Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius had a servant follow him around and every time Aurelius received a compliment the servant had to whisper in his ear, “You’re just a man… just a man,” “Memento Mori” (“remember you are mortal”) to keep him humble.

It is not surprising that Mugabe did not want to hear the song “Pidigori waenda!” He did not want to be reminded that he was a bad person and worse still that he was mortal! His legacy of 30 000 deaths and the economic meltdown and his death confirms he was dictator and a mortal!

Kenyatta Declares 3 Days Of Mourning Mugabe

The president of Kenya, Uhuru Kenyatta has declared three days of mourning for Zimbabwe’s founding leader, Robert Mugabe.

In a statement, Kenyatta ordered all flags to in the country to be flown at high-mast for the next three days to show respect to the veteran leader who died in the early hours of Friday in a hospital in Singapore.

We present the full statement below.

 Today the 6th September, 2019, Kenya has lost a close friend, following the passing of H.E. Comrade Robert Gabriel Mugabe. I take this opportunity on my own behalf, that of my family and the people of the Republic of Kenya to offer my deepest heartfelt condolences to Mrs Grace Mugabe, the entire family and the people of the great Republic of Zimbabwe.

 Comrade Mugabe was a shining beacon of Africa’s liberation struggle, an icon that led Zimbabwe in its liberation struggle from Colonialism to independence. He was also an embodiment of the Pan African spirit, offering immeasurable assistance to his neighbour South Africa, in their struggle to end apartheid, and in his steady insistence that Africa’s problems required African solutions. He spent a lifetime challenging Africa to find its place and voice among the Community of Nations, and stand tall. For all these and many other achievements, he will be fondly missed and remembered.

 Kenya and Zimbabwe enjoy strong cordial relations founded on our shared struggle against colonialism and for self-determination. Throughout his tenure as President, H. E. Mugabe maintained close relationships with Kenya, visiting Kenya on several occasions, the last such occasion was during TICAD VI in 2016.

It is this close relationship that has seen Kenya and Zimbabwe assist each other to build capacities in various fields and confer each other at different multilateral fora. We will remember him for nurturing a strong and growing the relationship between Kenya and Zimbabwe.

UHURU KENYATTA,

President.

Former President Robert Mugabe’s Degrees

The late former President Robert Mugabe had the following degrees

QualificationInstitution
BA (History And English)University Of Fort Hare1951 South Africa
Bachelor Of AdministrationUNISASouth Africa
Bachelor Of EducationUNISASouth Africa
BSc EconomicsUniversity Of LondonExternal Program
Bachelor Of LawsUniversity Of LondonExternal Program
Masters Of LawsUniversity Of London
MSc EconomicsUniversity Of LondonExternal Program
Honorary Doctor Of Laws (LLD)University of Massachusetts1986 (revoked in June 2008)
Honorary LLDUniversity Of Michigan1990 (revoked in September 2008)
Honorary LLDUniversity of Edinburgh1994 ( revoked in June 2007)
Honorary LLDAhmadou Bello UniversityNigeria
Honorary LLDMorehouse CollegeAtlanta
Honorary LLDSt. Augustine’s UniversityTanzania
Honorary LLDLomonosov Moscow State UniversityRussia
Honorary LLDSolusi UniversityZimbabwe
Honorary Doctor Of LettersAfrica UniversityZimbabwe
Honorary Doctor Of Civil LawsUniversity Of MauritiusMauritius
Doctor Of CommerceUniversity Of Fort HareSouth Africa
Doctor Of TechnologyNUSTZImbabwe
D.Phil (African Heritage and Philosophy)Great Zimbabwe UniversityZimbabwe

First Capital Bank Retrenches

By A Correspondent- First Capital Bank Zimbabwe (FCB), formerly Barclays Bank, has laid off 120 workers as the economic crisis continues to take a toll on the beleaguered financial services sector, NewsDay can exclusively reveal.

The workers were served with the retrenchment letters early last month and ceased reporting for duty on August 31.

“We confirm that Barclays retrenched a total of 120 workers of which 97 were our members. Workers have since been notified that the last day to report for duty was 31 August 2019,” said a source.

The bank’s spokesperson Emily Nemapare said they were still in the process of finalising the restructuring exercise in terms of legal and other applicable requirements.

“This has come on the back of a review of the operating model aimed at creating operational efficiencies. The exercise also seeks to respond to local and global trends impacting the banking industry,”Nemapare said.

According to information at hand, negotiations for retrenchment packages held in the past months reached a deadlock.

“As highlighted in your notice of intention to retrench letter, it was advised that in the event that the parties fail to agree to a retrenchment package ,the employer will pay out the minimum statutory retrenchment package as enshrined in section 12C( 2) of the Labour Act on or before the effective retrenchment date,” a communique from the bank reads.

However, the bank railroaded its way to table its offer comprising of 12 month’s salary, three months cash in lieu of notice, use of staff accounts for three months, medical aid cover for six months, pension in line with the standing pension rules, school fees for 2019 third term. Affected workers above 55 years would benefit 5 000 shares for the first 10 years of service and 100 shares for every year thereafter under the
employee share ownership scheme.

Zimbabwe Banks and Allied Workers Union (Zibawu) acting secretary Shephard Ngandu said the bank erred in its retrenchment process as it did not consult prior to the exercise, allegations which FCB has denied.

“We have been engaging the employer on behalf of our members that First Capital Bank did not follow the requirements of the law particularly section 25A and 12D of the Labour Act.

Some provisions of section 25A provide that “without prejudice to the provisions of any collective bargaining agreement that may be applicable to the establishment concerned, a works council shall be entitled to be
consulted by the employer about proposals relating to any of the following matters (a) the restructuring of the workplace caused by the introduction of new technology and work methods; the retrenchment of
employees, whether voluntary or compulsory,” Ngandu said.

He said the employer was supposed to afford the members of the works council a reasonable opportunity to make representations and to advance alternative proposals.

The current job haemorrhage is linked to currency shocks stemming from the floating of the Zimbabwe dollar which has resulted in the translation of foreign currency denominated assets at the interbank rate. As revealed by the stock brokerage firm IH securities recently in cases where the banks have net liabilities denominated in foreign currency, [this] resulted in a larger increase in liabilities than asset.

The bank’s principal source of net interest income remained largely flat at $19,34 million in the period ended June 2018 from a 2018 comparative of $18,85 million.

Net interest income is derived from taking deposits and lending money as the most basic function of a bank. Banks usually charge higher interest on the money it lends than the interest it pays on deposits.

IH securities has indicated that banks’ lending capacity has been decimated after the adoption of mono-currency regime which now means the set minimum capital requirement for commercial banks, which was set at
US$100 million to be achieved by 2020, had effectively been reduced to US$10 million. The implication is that the real value of capital is now US$10 million. This has caused most banks to re-assess risk and and
further strain liquidity. Last month, the country’s largest financial institution CBZ Holdings chopped off more than 100 workers citing need to enhance operational efficiency.-Newsday

“Ministries’ “Lackadaisical” Way Of Doing Things Irks Gvnt”: Sibanda

By A Correspondent- Government is concerned by the lack of urgency in some ministries, which is derailing reforms on ease of doing business.

The measures are aimed at creating a conducive environment to turn Zimbabwe into a competitive destination of choice.

This was said by Chief Secretary to the President and Cabinet Dr Misheck Sibanda yesterday while launching the 2020-2021 Edition of the of Ease of Doing Business Reform Programme.

Dr Sibanda said it was imperative that “we step up all our efforts in order to realise the meaningful investment that we dearly yearn for”.

“The attitude by some Government ministries in lacking urgency to resolve outstanding bottlenecks is regrettable, to say the least.

Acting lackadaisically when dealing with economic reforms of national interest is a complete departure from the agreed Government investment drive,” said Dr Sibanda.

“This, I must say, is totally unacceptable under the New Dispensation. I wish to remind colleagues that these reforms are strategic in nature for our economic revival and development as a nation in this competitive global economy. By their nature, they constitute a core element of your performance assessment for your tenure of office.

“As we embark upon another phase of Ease of Doing Business reforms implementation, I therefore impress upon you to lead from the front in championing the change we all aspire in order to support the existing business as well as attracting the much needed domestic and foreign investment.”-StateMedia

“It’s Unconstitutional”: Doctors React To Gvnt Strike Ban

By A Correspondent- Public hospital doctors have vowed to continue with their strike, which started on Tuesday this week, despite the government’s move to ban all forms of industrial action.

Cabinet on Tuesday announced its proposal to include doctors on the essential services list comprising of police, prison services and the army.

The proposal, if passed, would see doctors only being allowed to picket at their employer’s offices for a few hours without embarking on full-blown strike action.

In a statement on Wednesday, Zimbabwe Hospital Doctors’ Association (ZHDA) said the announcement by Health minister Obadiah Moyo of a ban on further strikes by doctors was unconstitutional.

“We have noted with concern unsettling and unconstitutional statements made in the afternoon of yesterday (Tuesday) by the Health minister to bar our members from exercising their labour rights to collective job action in cases of labour disputes with the employer.

“Dr Obadiah Moyo is campaigning for a legislation that is not in keeping with modern-day labour practices anywhere in the world. The purported Bill seeks to deprive doctors of their right to strike and collectively table labour disputes,” part of the statement read.

ZHDA dismissed as false, State media reports that the Health Services Board had finally reviewed their salaries as they were yet to receive communication on that regard.

“We would like to make it very clear that we simply don’t have the capacity to report for duty anymore. Unless and until this grievance is dealt with accordingly, we will not be able to resume work. We derive no pleasure in abandoning patients. We call upon the minister and the employer to find a solution to this impasse before they endanger more lives,” the statement said.

In surveys conducted by a local publication yesterday, only a few doctors could be seen at both Parirenyatwa and Harare Central hospitals.

Efforts to get official comments from both hospitals hit a wall as calls went unanswered by the time of going to print last night.

The situation has remained the same in Bulawayo hospitals as the large chunk of junior doctors did not show up for duty at the city’s two major health institution – Mpilo Central Hospital and the United Bulawayo Hospitals (UBH). A visit to the health institutions established that even nurses were sending back some outpatients on grounds that there were few doctors who were attending to the patients.

Mpilo Hospital clinical director Solwayo Ngwenya said: “Only 18 junior doctors came to work out of 57. We are working and it’s better than in previous days which were devastating. We are trying to manage the situation.”

A nurse at the hospital, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said patients were being turned away as there were no doctors.

A visit to UBH at 3pm showed that some patients were being attended to although service was slower than usual.-Newsday

Brother In Law A Menace At Parents’ House

By A Correspondent- A Luveve woman is living in fear of her brother-in-law who occasionally chases her out her parents’ house whenever they have misunderstandings.

All this drama after Simeon Chanza married Magaret Matiza’s sister Monica Chanza and then the couple decided to go and live with Matiza at her parents’ house. In her court papers Matiza made it clear that she would not tolerate Simeon’s disrespect.

“I am having problems with my brother-in-law Simeon. He came along with his wife who is my younger sister to stay at our parents’ house.

They were renting in Gwabalanda while I stayed with my parents. When our parents passed on they suggested we stay together at our family house.

“He is now chasing me out of my parents’ house saying I should go and stay with my son-in-law yet he is staying at my parents’ house. I have since resorted to ignoring him because he hurls insults at me. I am tired of being disrespected by him in my parents’ house. May the court grant me a protection order to stop him from doing that,” said Matiza.

In his response Simeon simply denied harassing Matiza.

In his ruling magistrate Urgent Vundla ordered Simeon to refrain from emotionally and psychologically abusing Matiza. He further said Simeon should not prevent or hinder Matiza from living in her parents’ house.-BMetro

Daring Thief Nabbed With A TV Dismounted At A Nightclub

By A Correspondent- A Bulawayo man ran out of luck when he was nabbed by security details at an upmarket nightclub before he could walk away with a television set from the establishment.

Twenty-seven-year-old Tapiwanashe Shumba – who is employed by a popular medical doctor in the city centre – was apprehended by bouncers at Vista Nightclub while carrying a stolen television that he had dismounted from a wall in the joint.

He appeared before magistrate Nomasiko Ndlovu charged with theft as defined in section 113(1) (a) of the Criminal Law Codification and Reform Act Chapter 9:23.

Allegations against Shumba were that on 4 August 2019, he dismounted a 40-inch LG plasma television from a wall at Vista Nightclub and tried to leave with it.

Shumba was apprehended by bouncers before he could leave the nightclub with the television worth $2 500. He was taken to the Bulawayo Central Police Station, before other revellers at the nightclub could mete out instant justice. A case of theft was then opened.

Shumba pleaded guilty to the charges and was sentenced to 10 days in prison with an option to pay a fine of $20.

He told a local publication that he did not remember committing the crime and blamed his actions on alcohol. “Like everyone else in the bar I was drunk and I don’t remember how it even happened,” he claimed.-BMetro

Daring Wife Kicks Out Hubby From His Parents’ House To Accommodate Lover

By A Correspondent- For Duncan Moyo from Bulawayo’s Nkulumane suburb life feels totally hopeless and depressing after his wife, Thandiwe Tshuma, following a domestic dispute, took the drastic action of kicking him out of his parents’ house where they were staying together to make way for her “longtime” boyfriend.

Yes you got it right, if you are in shock and confusion, that Moyo’s wife kicked him out of his parents’ house where they were staying together and accommodated her boyfriend.

A devastated Moyo said his wife used a protection order as a weapon to chuck him out of his parents’ house after their marriage hit turbulent waters.

As if that was not enough, Moyo said his estranged wife was also abusing maintenance payments spending the money on alcohol with her lover.

Moyo, whose world apparently came crashing down around him when his wife invited her boyfriend to stay with her at his parents’ house, cried out for help at the Bulawayo Civil Court where he was seeking a ‘counter’ restraining order against her.

“I got customarily married to Thandiwe Tshuma in 2009 and in March 2018 we started having problems which led her to apply for a protection order against me and it was granted.

“If I try to voice or reprimand her as a father and husband after she does something wrong, she rushes to the police station to report me that I have violated the terms of a protection order and I then get arrested for Contempt of Court.

“During the subsistence of our marriage we have been staying at my parents’ house but I am no longer staying there because ever since she obtained the protection aorder she has been using it as a tool to oppress and abuse me.

“My prayer to this court is that I need protection so that I will be able to move back into my parents’ house and also to stop her from staying with her boyfriend at that house. She is also abusing money I am contributing towards the upkeep of our children. She is using it to buy alcohol with her boyfriend at the expense of the children who are now suffering,” lamented Moyo.

He said after being chucked out of the house, his children lost the security of having a mother and father in the same home. Although Tshuma refuted accusations levelled against her by her estranged husband that she chucked him out of his parents’ house she, however, didn’t dispute allegations that when he moved out of the house she “replaced” him with another man.

“It is not true that I chucked him out of his parents’ house. He moved out on his own. It is also not true that I am abusing maintenance money buying beer since I don’t drink,” responded Tshuma in a stilted tone.

Moyo’s lifelong suffering will, however, continue after presiding magistrate Tinashe Tashaya dismissed his application saying it lacked merit.
Turning to his request to bar his wife from staying with her lover in his parents’ house, the magistrate said it was “impossible” since he (Moyo) was not the owner of the house.-BMetro

Teenage Rapes, Threatens Cousin

By A Correspondent- A 15-year- old boy from Magwiro Village under Chief Mataruse has appeared in court facing one count of rape after he raped his 12-year-old cousin while they were herding goats.

The boy pleaded guilty to the charge when he appeared before Gweru magistrate Phathekile Msipha.
The passing of sentence was postponed on condition that the juvenile does not commit a similar crime in the next five years.

Prosecuting, Talent Tadenyika told the court that on a date not known but in September 2018, the complainant together with the accused were herding goats.

The accused person then asked to have sex with the complainant but she refused and started walking home.

On the particular day, the accused person asked to have sex with his cousin and his request was turned down.

The court heard that after being turned down, the accused forced himself on the complainant.

“He ran after her, caught up with her and pushed her to the ground before raping her once. After committing the crime, the teen threatened the girl with unspecified action if she told anyone about the matter,” said Tadenyika.

Tadenyika said on the following day, the complainant told her sister and her aunt about the incident.

“The complainant narrated the whole ordeal to her aunt and sister who then advised her to tell her grandmother.

Upon narrating the incident to her granny, she was told not to divulge the issue to anyone but that it should be kept as a secret by the family,” he said.

The court heard that the complainant resorted to telling her teachers about the incident.

“She told her teachers at Chipinda Primary School who then reported the matter to Buchwa Police Station leading to the teen’s arrest.”

Kwekwe Couple “Sell” 4month Old Baby Boy

By A Correspondent- A Kwekwe-based couple got themselves in trouble with the law after they allegedly sold their four-month-old son to a woman who wanted to please her South Africa-based husband.

Merancia Musoni (28) and husband Zephenia Sibanda, also 28 , and his sister Edina Sibanda (34) reportedly sold their son to a woman who had faked a pregnancy and subsequent birth of the boy to her injiva husband.

The baby was, however, intercepted at the Beitbridge border post as the woman, Nontuthuko Ncube attempted to smuggle the boy to South Africa after the deal went sour.

The quartet has since appeared before a Kwekwe magistrate facing human trafficking charges.

Magistrate Storey Rushambwa remanded them in custody to 9 September for trial.

According to State papers, sometime in May ,Ncube who was in South Africa with her husband Matthew Mlalazi lied that she had fallen pregnant and according to her family traditions she was not allowed to give birth in a foreign land hence she had to travel back to Zimbabwe.

Upon her arrival in Zimbabwe, she shared her plight with Ncube who is her landlord who then hatched a plan to dupe the injiva.

Ncube then informed Nontuthuko not to worry as her brother Zephania had a baby boy.

A meeting was held and a plan was hatched that Mlalazi be called from South Africa to see their baby. Mlalazi, who like a real father came heavily laden with groceries mainly for the upkeep of the newly born baby.

Quickly, a birth certificate was acquired with the child being christened Munyaradzi Junior Mlalazi.

The matter came to light, however, when Mlalazi insisted that they take the baby to South Africa.

The move did not go down well with Musoni who then reported the matter to the police leading to their arrest.

The baby was intercepted at Beitbridge border post where Ncube was apprehended.-BMetro

Community Service For Man Who Stole From Neighbour

By A Correspondent- IT’S often said that the love of money is the root of all evil and the saying proved true for a Bulawayo man whose love for money landed him in the dock for stealing from a neighbour and colleague.

Twenty-one-year-old Robson Chiwanga did not think twice about stealing from his neighbour and colleague Admire Munotiyi (25) when he made off with the latter’s HP laptop, a charger and school identification card.

The two are on industrial attachment at the National Railways of Zimbabwe and are also neighbours at the NRZ Rufaq Quarters in Bulawayo.

Appearing before Bulawayo magistrate Lesigo Ngwenya, Chiwanga pleaded guilty to charges of unlawful entry and theft.

Prosecutor Ephraim Manongore said on 20 August 2019, at around 11 pm Chiwanga reportedly broke into his neighbour’s house through an open window and stole Munotiyi’s property.

Chiwanga escaped unnoticed through the window.

The accused, however, ran out of luck when he was spotted an hour later with the stolen items.

“Investigations were done and accused was found in the possession of the stolen property, leading to his arrest,” stated the prosecutor.

The value of the stolen goods amounted to US$400 and everything was recovered.

Chiwanga was sentenced to 210 hours of community service.

“No Toy Toying, Chanting Slogans To And From Venue Of MDC 20th Anniversary Celebrations”: ZRP

By A Correspondent- The Zimbabwe Republic Police has barred MDC supporters from toy toying and chanting slogans on their way to and from the venue of the MDC 20th anniversary celebrations to held on the 14th of September at Rufaro Stadium.

In a letter written to MDC Organiser Amos Chibaya, the police said the supporters must not disturb the peace or vandalise property and they must adhere to the times they availed to the police.

Chibaya was also told that the vehicles proceeding to the venue must use the agreed roads.

Chibaya has a pending court case over failing to stop demonstrators in Harare after the police had issued a prohibition order barring the march.

“We Are Not In Pain, Mugabe Authored Zimbabwe’s Mess!”

Said Zvobgo Luckson: Mr Odinga the people of Zimbabwe you are passing condolences are not in pain, we are at peace and not feeling anything. Our only worry right now is where to get next meal, fuel, money, electricity, water, jobs, mealie-meal not the passing of Mugabe. He created this mess!

His statement was a reaction to a tweet by Kenyan President Raila Odinga who said:

“I wish to pass my condolences to the people of Zimbabwe following the death of their founding Father, H.E. Robert Mugabe. We join the country in praying for peace and stability at this moment of national grief.”

“Fire Reckless Tongue Mutodi”: Mnangagwa Told

By A Correspondent- President Emmerson Mnangagwa has been told to relieve the deputy Minister of Information, Energy Mutodi of his duties following “reckless” remarks on Zimbabweans of Ndebele origins.

Mutodi had in a video in which he castigates Afrophobia in South Africa said:

“South Africans, Zimbabweans we are one people, including people from Botswana, Malawi, Mozambique, we are all members of Sadc and we are all working towards the same goal of achiev- ing economic success in our countries. For South Africa, you will find out that in Zimbabwe here, if you didn’t know, just about 1836 we accommodat- ed thousands of South Africans who were fleeing from (the then Zulu king) Shaka. They were led by Mzilikazi (the Ndebele king) and they settled on the western part of Zimbabwe, as I am speaking now, at least three million Zimbabweans have South African origins.

The video attracted a backlash from Zimbabweans from various walks of life. For them, Mutodi meant that Zimbabweans of Ndebele origins were mere refugees in Zimbabwe.

Although the former rhumba musician has since apologised, some have questioned why he is still a deputy Minister whilst others questioned how he got the post in the first place.

“Mugabe Made Mistakes”: Kenyan President Raila Odinga

Kenyan President Raila Odinga has said the late former Zimbabwean president Robert Mugabe was not immune to making mistakes hence he was a liberation war hero who during his reign had also made mistakes.

He said:

“I wish to pass my condolences to the people of Zimbabwe following the death of their founding Father, H.E. Robert Mugabe. We join the country in praying for peace and stability at this moment of national grief.

Mugabe was a liberation hero who like others, made mistakes during his reign.”

Pictures- Mugabe’s Zvimba Homestead: Is This His Desired Final Resting Place?

By A Correspondent- The late former President Robert Mugabe reportedly informed his close relatives that he does not want to be buried at the National Heroes Acre, a few weeks before he died.

Mugabe died on Friday, 6 September 2019, at the age of 95 at a hospital in Singapore where he had been unwell for an extended period of time.

Last month, a local publication reported that Mugabe did not want the current Zanu PF government to preside over his funeral.

Unnamed family members disclosed that Mugabe made it clear that he would not want President Emmerson Mnangagwa and his allies to perform his last rites having overthrown him in a military coup in November 2017.

Here are some pictures of his beautiful rural homestead:

Mugabe’s Zvimba homestead
Mugabe’s Zvimba homestead
Mugabe’s Zvimba homestead