Anthrax hits Mutare Farm Prison 

Source: Anthrax hits Mutare Farm Prison | The Herald February 28, 2019 Anthrax is a life-threatening infectious disease caused by bacteria that normally affects cattle Manicaland Correspondent THE Zimbabwe Prisons and Correctional Services (ZPCS) has recorded an anthrax outbreak at its Mutare Farm Prison which officials said can manage to contain. The disease is said […]

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Source: Anthrax hits Mutare Farm Prison | The Herald February 28, 2019

Anthrax hits Mutare Farm Prison
Anthrax is a life-threatening infectious disease caused by bacteria that normally affects cattle

Manicaland Correspondent
THE Zimbabwe Prisons and Correctional Services (ZPCS) has recorded an anthrax outbreak at its Mutare Farm Prison which officials said can manage to contain. The disease is said to have killed pigs at the farm prison.

ZPCS Manicaland spokesperson Mr Liberty Mhlanga said they discovered the outbreak at their farm sometime two weeks ago.

He said they took the affected pigs into quarantine in a bid to contain the outbreak.

“We have recorded an anthrax case on February 6,” said Mhlanga. “The pig died but we have managed to contain the disease and issued a 30-day quarantine order to make sure the diseases will not be transmitted to other pigs.”

Mr Mhlanga said they have not recorded any similar case or experience suspected cases relating to the disease.

He said they have issued bio-security measures and vaccinated all of their pigs.

“We have managed to vaccinate all of our pigs and review our bio-security measures of foot baths and spraying of all farm motor vehicles,” he said.

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ZACC holds national anti-graft dialogue

Source: ZACC holds national anti-graft dialogue | The Herald February 28, 2019 Crime Reporter The Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission (ZACC) will today hold a national anti-corruption dialogue to discuss measures to fight corruption. ZACC said in a statement that the event is expected to be attended by officials from Parliament, the Attorney-General’s Office, National Prosecuting Authority, […]

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Source: ZACC holds national anti-graft dialogue | The Herald February 28, 2019

Crime Reporter
The Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission (ZACC) will today hold a national anti-corruption dialogue to discuss measures to fight corruption.

ZACC said in a statement that the event is expected to be attended by officials from Parliament, the Attorney-General’s Office, National Prosecuting Authority, Home Affairs and Cultural Heritage, Zimbabwe Republic Police, Zimbabwe Revenue Authority and representatives of civic and religious organisations.

ZACC secretary Mr Silence Pondo will chair the dialogue.

“The dialogue is to do with the development of the National Anti-Corruption Strategy, which is in line with the Sadc Protocol on Corruption, the African Union Conventions on Combating Corruption and the United Nations Conventions Against Corruption to which we a signatory as a country,” ZACC said.

The organisation said the strategy focuses on anti-corruption measures in the private, public sectors and the civil society.

The main objective is to identify measures that both the private and public sectors have in place to prevent and combat corruption and their challenges.

Recommendations are also going to be drawn up during the dialogue.

The dialogue also comes after the process of reconstituting ZACC to lend weight to President Mnangagwa’s anti-corruption drive has begun in earnest, with Parliament inviting nominations of suitable candidates to replace commissioners that resigned on January 31.

ZACC chairman Dr Job Whabira and his entire commission comprising Dr Nanette Silukhuni, Mr Goodson Nguni, Mrs Christine Fundira, Mr Denford Chirindo, Ms Cathy Muchechetere, Ms Farai Mashonganyika and Mr Boyana Ndou left after being in office for three years from February 2016.

President Mnangagwa described the old commission as “rotten to the core” and its departure paved the way for a clean slate in fighting corruption, which is at the centre of rebuilding the economy in accordance to the Transitional Stabilisation Programme (TSP), a short-term economic blueprint running until 2020.

Some of the functions of ZACC are investigating and exposing cases of corruption in the public and private sector, receiving and considering complaints from the public and direct the Commissioner-General of Police to investigate cases of suspected corruption and to report to the commission on the results of any such investigation.

It is also mandated to refer cases to the National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) for prosecution.

ZACC must also make recommendations to Government and other persons on measures to enhance integrity and accountability and prevent improper conduct in the public and private   sector.

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Mines ministry vehicle scandal telling

The vehicles scandal involving senior employees at the Ministry of Mines is an insult to the tax payer and an indictment to the military government’s rhetorical intention to fight corruption. Source: Mines ministry vehicle scandal telling – The Zimbabwean February 28, 2019 The MDC has been arguing that the country needed saving from the hands […]

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The vehicles scandal involving senior employees at the Ministry of Mines is an insult to the tax payer and an indictment to the military government’s rhetorical intention to fight corruption.

Source: Mines ministry vehicle scandal telling – The Zimbabwean February 28, 2019


The MDC has been arguing that the country needed saving from the hands of a very dangerous cartel which fits the description of George B.N. Ayittey that states that a Vampire state, is one in which the government has been hijacked by a phalanx of bandits, gangsters, crooks, and scoundrels, who use the machinery of the state to enrich themselves, their cronies, supporters, and members of their own ethnic, racial, or religious group and excludes everyone else.

It is unacceptable for the State to lose half a million US dollars to less than ten individuals who imported cars in the name of government only to change ownership in a blink of an eye.
These individuals park imported vehicles and proceed to hire cars for daily duties yet the imported cars were supposed to serve that purpose.

Yet again, millions of public funds are lost in this hiring exercise.

Surprisingly, Mnangagwa in his lack of wisdom created a so-called corruption crack unit in his office in violation of the constitution, supposedly to intensify the fight against corruption.
The crack unit is not only illegal and a waste of tax payer’s funds but clearly ineffective.  If anything, corruption continues to blossom.

A few weeks ago, a shocking announcement of resignation of the entire anti-corruption commission was made with no details provided.

It is therefore concerning when these incidences are exposed in the absence of a very important Constitutional independent Commission. Sad to say, even in the presence of the said Commissions, they are pacified, politicized, incapacitated and undermined by the military government.

We saw the undermining and attack on the Zimbabwe Human Rights Commission recently for releasing an objective report on human rights violations in January by the state. The courts were swift and ruthless on a man who was charged of stealing a plough during the National Shutdown yet people who swindle the state of millions get away with it.

State security details targeted innocent MDC members and mass arrests took place only for hordes to be acquitted. Yet those with clear cases to answer walk scot-free.

The MDC calls for a comprehensive investigation into this scandal and a full investigation of all vehicles imported for executive use in all government departments.

More importantly the MDC reaffirms that the following must be done in respect of corruption;-

1. The introduction of criminal sanctions for all corruption related offenses.

2. Strengthening, professionalization and ensuring independence of all institutions meant to combat corruption including the National Prosecution Authority, Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission , Zimbabwe Republic Police and the Judiciary.

3. Declaration of assets by all public office bearers and senior public executives including those in State Enterprises.

4. State sanctioned lifestyle audits for all senior public servants and public office holders.

5. Introduction of limited terms of office for senior public executive offices including heads of parastatals.

Behold the New. Change that Delivers!

Jacob Mafume
MDC National Spokesperson

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Zimbabwe’s new currency unmoved as transactions stay restricted

Source: Zimbabwe’s new currency unmoved as transactions stay restricted – Times  Live People walk past the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe building in Harare, Zimbabwe, February 25 2019.  Image: REUTERS/Philimon Bulawayo Zimbabwe’s new currency was stuck around 2.5 to the US dollar on Tuesday as tight restrictions on trading and exchanging it remained in place despite a […]

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Source: Zimbabwe’s new currency unmoved as transactions stay restricted – Times  Live

People walk past the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe building in Harare, Zimbabwe, February 25 2019.

People walk past the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe building in Harare, Zimbabwe, February 25 2019. 
Image: REUTERS/Philimon Bulawayo

Zimbabwe’s new currency was stuck around 2.5 to the US dollar on Tuesday as tight restrictions on trading and exchanging it remained in place despite a central bank pledge to let the RTGS dollar trade freely.

Zimbabwe abandoned a discredited 1:1 dollar peg for its dollar-surrogate bond notes and electronic dollars last week, merging them into a lower-value transitional currency called the RTGS dollar in an effort to ease chronic cash shortages.

Economists welcomed the move but have urged the government let the RTGS fluctuate as it has promised.

On Tuesday, banks were only selling US dollars to corporate clients and individuals with invoices or receipts for imports deemed a priority such as fuel and medicines.

Finance Minister Mthuli Ncube told Reuters in an interview on Monday that the market should determine the RTGS exchange rate, but that the government wanted to avoid excessive volatility.

Tellers at two banks in downtown Harare said they could help clients make purchases from overseas at a rate of 2.5625 RTGS to the U.S. dollar, the rate that other banks offered on Monday.

Banks were not yet selling US dollars to individuals in cash, and neither was a bureau de change at the Road Port bus station.

“The Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ) hasn’t given us any U.S. dollars in cash yet,” a teller at a CABS bank branch said.

The state-owned Herald newspaper reported that Botswana had offered to lend Zimbabwe $600 million to support its diamond industry and private firms.

A currency dealer said the RBZ had authorised banks to buy and sell foreign currency 2.5 percent either side of the rate of 2.5 RTGS at which the central bank has sold US dollars to banks in recent days.

Exchange rates on the black market for the bond note – which many ordinary Zimbabweans still use in shops – were at 3.6 to the US dollar, unchanged from Monday, informal currency traders said.

Zimbabwe recently adopted a new currency, called the real-time gross settlement (RTGS) dollar. But how will this new currency really affect ordinary Zimbabweans – and will it help the country’s struggling economy? Business Time reporter, Mudiwa Gavaza gives us the breakdown.

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Alleluia Ministries leader Pastor Alph Lukau in major climbdown over resurrection miracle

Alleluia Ministries church pastor Alph Lukau, who is said to have resurrected a man who was in a coffin at the weekend, has said the man was already alive when he arrived at the church. Speaking to Gauteng broadcaster PowerFM’s Power Drive host Thabiso…

Alleluia Ministries church pastor Alph Lukau, who is said to have resurrected a man who was in a coffin at the weekend, has said the man was already alive when he arrived at the church. Speaking to Gauteng broadcaster PowerFM's Power Drive host Thabiso Tema on Wednesday evening, Lukau said he was busy with a […]