GOOD NEWS: US dollar/RTGS dollar rates fall as market self corrects

The second day of trading on the foreign currency interbank market witnessed commendable activity with indications that the US – RTGS dollar cross rate will stabilise to below three in the long term. The product of the Monetary Policy Statement, the fo…

The second day of trading on the foreign currency interbank market witnessed commendable activity with indications that the US – RTGS dollar cross rate will stabilise to below three in the long term. The product of the Monetary Policy Statement, the forex interbank market was off to a flying start with US$5 million worth of […]

RESURRECTION CHALLENGE

We invite this man 👇🏿 who was “risen from the dead” to join us at our next #Aresebetseng clean up to do some work with the living. The Clean up takes place every third Saturday of the month. #ResurrectionChallenge^TK pic.twitte…

We invite this man 👇🏿 who was “risen from the dead” to join us at our next #Aresebetseng clean up to do some work with the living. The Clean up takes place every third Saturday of the month. #ResurrectionChallenge^TK pic.twitter.com/YpOEHNpj6M — City of Joburg (@CityofJoburgZA) February 25, 2019

Battlefields mine disaster response: Lawyers slam government

Source: Battlefields mine disaster response: Lawyers slam government | Daily News Environmental lawyers have blasted the government’s unusually slow emergency response to the Battlefields mine disaster. People and Earth Solidarity Law Network (PESLawyers) called the late pulling out of bodies of at least 24 illegal gold miners out of shafts in the mine west of Harare […]

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Source: Battlefields mine disaster response: Lawyers slam government | Daily News

Environmental lawyers have blasted the government’s unusually slow emergency response to the Battlefields mine disaster.
People and Earth Solidarity Law Network (PESLawyers) called the late pulling out of bodies of at least 24 illegal gold miners out of shafts in the mine west of Harare “just heartbreaking”.

The dozens of illegal gold miners were pulled out of mine shafts that were flooded, with only eight rescued alive, but alarmed lawyers said the anaemic rescue efforts did not begin until four days later.
The Mines minister Winston Chitando has said government was hampered by the sheer magnitude of the disaster, but its decision to fail to deploy supplies and staff in time to rescue the trapped miners has attracted opprobrium.

The sense of let-down is all the more stark because the “artisanal miners sell their gold to the government through Fidelity Printers and Refiners and various gold centres dotted across the country,” PESLawyers said.

And it is not the first time the government has faced severe criticism for a slow or weak response to disasters.
PESLawyers director Lenin Chisaira said the State has not taken adequate measures to regularise, capacitate and provide support measures to small-scale miners. “It took the government an unexplainable large amount of time to respond to the Battlefields mines disaster.

“Disaster response teams should therefore be evaluated and adequately funded to avoid unnecessary loss of lives,” Chisaira said.
In the preliminary report titled ‘‘gold capitalism and disaster preparedness in Zimbabwe’’, Chisaira said the accident, which was declared a national disaster exposes lack of disaster preparedness by both the State and local authorities as well as the culpability of large-scale gold miners who retain yet underutilise gold claims.

“The painful accident invites the need for a critique of the current nature of gold capitalism, disaster preparedness and the unequal and class nature of environmental and economic justice in Zimbabwe,” he said.

The lawyers challenged government to formalise and regularise artisanal gold miners, especially those utilising abandoned or neglected mines, while calling on the Environmental Management Agency (EMA) to be more efficient in implementing its statutory roles.
The lawyers recommended a commission of inquiry to investigate property rights restrictions occasioned by large-scale mine ownership and underutilisation of gold claims and blocks.

They also called for training of miners and other concerned individuals to be trained in civil protection services as provided in the Civil Protection Act. Battlefields mine disaster response: Lawyers slam govt

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WIFE KILLER KILLS SELF

A MAN from Binga fatally axed his wife before killing
himself after suspecting that she was cheating on him, police confirmed
yesterday.

The woman was killed on the day that she returned home
after the couple’s three-month long separation and the …

A MAN from Binga fatally axed his wife before killing himself after suspecting that she was cheating on him, police confirmed yesterday. The woman was killed on the day that she returned home after the couple’s three-month long separation and the murder and suicide were allegedly triggered by a phone call and “love” message from an alleged boyfriend. Fandison Mwinde (28) of Bbolobboza

Farm eviction rattles Zimbabwe

Source: Farm eviction rattles Zimbabwe – Times Live Remembrance Gwaradzimba, the son of a Zanu-PF official, arrived to evict the owner of a farm in Zimbabwe renowned for its coffee.  Image: nito500/123rf A video clip of a senior Zanu-PF official’s son arriving to evict the owner of a well-known farm has sent jitters through Zimbabwe. Remembrance […]

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Source: Farm eviction rattles Zimbabwe – Times Live

Remembrance Gwaradzimba, the son of a Zanu-PF official, arrived to evict the owner of a farm in Zimbabwe renowned for its coffee.

Remembrance Gwaradzimba, the son of a Zanu-PF official, arrived to evict the owner of a farm in Zimbabwe renowned for its coffee. 
Image: nito500/123rf

A video clip of a senior Zanu-PF official’s son arriving to evict the owner of a well-known farm has sent jitters through Zimbabwe.

Remembrance Gwaradzimba, son of provincial minister Ellen Gwaradzimba, went to FarFell Coffee Estate accompanied by police and armed with an eviction notice issued by the ministry of Lands, Agriculture, Water, Climate and Rural Settlements.

The farm is run by retired Swiss banker Richard Le Vieux, a reputable farmer who has been in the business of exporting coffee, avocados and macadamia nuts for the past 30 years.

Mbudzana (“Junior”) demanded to be shown “his land” by the farmer.

“I have got this offer letter. Do you respect it? It has 229 hectares. Show me the 229 hectares, show me my land according to the offer letter. How is that difficult? I will stay wherever I want to stay in my piece of land,” said Mbudzana in a dialogue that was recorded on video, with Le Vieux who kept asking questions.

The 229 hectares that Mbudzana wants has an almost ripe crop on it. If he takes over the land he is expected to simply harvest. His “offer letter” to take over the farm was issued on January 10. FarFell Coffee Estate is contesting the matter in the high court.

Le Vieux said he challenged the legality of the notice but declined to comment about the matter as it is sub judice. “My lawyers are handling the matter so there is nothing to talk about. All I want is for my world-renowned coffee brand to be saved,” he said.

The “eviction team” went to the farm last Sunday accompanied by a police chief from Chipinge: inspector Dohwa. The policeman said the farmer’s refusal to let them onto the land as it was a resting day was disrespectful.

“I actually thought you would respect us as police officers, and when we come, we normally don’t just come to have fun,” said Dohwa.

Lands, Agriculture, Water, Climate and Rural Settlements minister Perence Shiri said in 2018 that farm invasions were a thing of the past and “lawlessness and anarchy” would not be allowed to prevail.

At the time government had resolved to compensate farmers that were displaced during a land reform program that saw at least 4,000 white commercial farmers displaced. Some ended up in countries such as Zambia and Nigeria, strengthening the backbone of those countries’ agrarian sectors.

At the height of the farm invasions, government took some farms that were initially protected by Bilateral Investment Promotion and Protection Agreements (Bippas) between governments. Government records show that 197 out of 258 farms, measuring 977,000 hectares, under Bippa were acquired for resettlement.

Countries such as South Africa, Denmark, Germany, Belgium, the Netherlands, Italy, Malaysia and Switzerland have land under Bippas.

Farm evictions dented Harare’s international image for investors. Finance minister professor Mthuli Ncube said recently that government was finalising compensation packages for white former land owners.

“We have made progress in compensating the white farmers and the farmers themselves have also managed to come up with a figure on what they want to be compensated.

“On our side as government, we have done our evaluations using the white farmers’ methodology for nine provinces on the value of improvements,” he said.

Government requires at least US $9bn for the process but put a mere US $53m aside in the 2019 budget.

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