Celebrations as Nelson Chamisa’s MDC Alliance bashes Zanu PF in by election

THE RULING ZANU-PF party gave the main opposition MDC Alliance a good run for its money in the Chitungwiza ward 24 elections held yesterday. The MDC Alliance candidate, Yotamu Chigwada, won the by-election by polling 1059 votes against ZANU-PF’s Mercy …

THE RULING ZANU-PF party gave the main opposition MDC Alliance a good run for its money in the Chitungwiza ward 24 elections held yesterday. The MDC Alliance candidate, Yotamu Chigwada, won the by-election by polling 1059 votes against ZANU-PF’s Mercy Guvamombe who polled 998, a close shave of just about 61 votes. Acccording to the […]

WATCH: Zimbabwe’s bread shortage

Source: WATCH: Zimbabwe’s bread shortage | eNCA Zimbabwe’s consumer rights body is urging people to replace bread with sweet potatoes and porridge, as wheat supplies there dwindle. In the past few weeks the price of bread has risen by almost 70 percent. Courtesy #DStv403 JOHANNESBURG – The Grain Millers Association of Zimbabwe is warning that the […]

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Source: WATCH: Zimbabwe’s bread shortage | eNCA

Zimbabwe’s consumer rights body is urging people to replace bread with sweet potatoes and porridge, as wheat supplies there dwindle. In the past few weeks the price of bread has risen by almost 70 percent. Courtesy #DStv403

JOHANNESBURG – The Grain Millers Association of Zimbabwe is warning that the country has just a week’s worth of wheat.

Zimbabwe’s consumer rights body is urging people to replace bread with sweet potatoes and porridge, as wheat supplies in the country dwindle.

In the past few weeks, the price of bread has risen by almost 70-percent.

A shortage of foreign currency has restricted imports.

Zimbabwe needs the imports to supplement local crops to make flour for bread, the country’s largest staple after maize meal.

The price of bread is more than R10.50 a standard loaf after increasing almost 70-percent recently.

Zimbabwe consumes 1.8 million loaves of bread a day.

It needs 400, 000 metric tons of wheat a year.

The country is currently producing less than half of its annual requirement.

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Chiefs demand answers on Gukurahundi

Source: Chiefs demand answers on Gukurahundi | The Standard (Local News) By NQOBANI NDLOVU Traditional leaders in Matabeleland have written to the South African parliament requesting permission to be allowed to present “facts” about the 1980’s mass killings in Matabeleland and Midlands as they push for an independent investigation into the atrocities known as Gukurahundi. […]

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Source: Chiefs demand answers on Gukurahundi | The Standard (Local News)

By NQOBANI NDLOVU

Traditional leaders in Matabeleland have written to the South African parliament requesting permission to be allowed to present “facts” about the 1980’s mass killings in Matabeleland and Midlands as they push for an independent investigation into the atrocities known as Gukurahundi.

Chief Vezi Mafu (Maduna) of Filabusi in November 2018 petitioned the United Nations (UN) seeking the setting-up of an independent inquiry into the Gukurahundi massacres.

The government reacted angrily to Maduna’s UN petition amid reports that he has faced persecution since then, but that has not deterred the traditional leader.

In a letter dated January 12, 2019 and addressed to the speaker of the South African parliament, Matabeleland chiefs requested to be “afforded an opportunity to be allowed to formally present the facts about the genocide that occurred in their region of Zimbabwe.”

“Of concern, the genocide was perpetrated upon the Ndebele people by the government of the day.

“The government of the day is still in office and evidently does not take this matter seriously.

“It is blatantly obvious that this government does not wish to address this matter, hence our wish as traditional leaders to directly engage you,” reads in part the letter signed on behalf of the Matabeleland traditional leaders by outspoken Ntabazinduna chief, Felix Nhlanhlayamangwe Ndiweni.

President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s role during Gukurahundi continues to be questioned, and has faced protests in Pretoria, South Africa, and at the Zimbabwe International Trade Fair in Bulawayo over the emotive issue.

Mnangagwa’s predecessor, Robert Mugabe, dispatched the Fifth Brigade — an army unit trained by the North Koreans — in the early 80’s to to supposedly quash what he claimed were insurgents bent on overthrowing him, resulting in the killing of over 20 000 civilians.

Mnangagwa has said he is prepared to apologise if recommended by the National Peace and Reconciliation Commission, but traditional leaders doubted the president’s sincerity in soberly addressing the issue.

“As traditional leaders, we live within these affected areas, within the Ndebele nation and we are mindful that this matter of the unresolved genocide has the potential to seriously destabilise the country and indeed the Southern African Development Community region,” the letter added.

“The warning signs are already written on the wall, just as they were in Kenya and Rwanda.

“From our perspective, it is only the international arena that can do justice to this issue for it is unrealistic for a perpetrator of genocide to then investigate and prosecute themselves,” the letter adds.

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1:1 cost Zim $2bn annually, says Ncube 

Source: 1:1 cost Zim $2bn annually, says Ncube – The Standard February 24, 2019 BY FIDELITY MHLANGA  ZIMBABWE’S currency controls which saw bond notes being pegged at par with the United States dollar cost treasury an estimated $2 billion, a government official has revealed. Finance minister Mthuli Ncube told a business meeting on Friday that […]

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Source: 1:1 cost Zim $2bn annually, says Ncube – The Standard February 24, 2019

BY FIDELITY MHLANGA 

ZIMBABWE’S currency controls which saw bond notes being pegged at par with the United States dollar cost treasury an estimated $2 billion, a government official has revealed.

Finance minister Mthuli Ncube told a business meeting on Friday that the increase in the price of fuel last month was the beginning of a process to liberalise the exchange rate system.

“A fixed exchange rate system is expensive. We were running a fixed exchange rate system, which cost us close to $2 billion a year because we were using USD as both a transactional currency and reserve currency,” he said.

“Let’s be honest, the one-to-one was punishing exporters in addition to taking away from exporters to fund your consumption habits.

“We were also borrowing and getting deeper and deeper into debt. And we were borrowing in an advance way such that the credit standing globally has gone down.”

The Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ) last Wednesday floated the exchange rate and introduced an interbank exchange system in which the rate will now be determined by the market.

Ncube said monetary reforms started last year when the central bank directed banks to separate hard currency deposits from realtime gross settlement (RTGS) system balances.

“Currency reform started on the 1st of October with the separation of accounts,” he said.

“Let me say one thing; when I said a domestic currency is coming in 12 months, I was doing you a favour.

“I was preparing your minds, that’s my job, to say don’t be shocked when the monetary policy is announced, what I meant is market rate.

“And here we are with the RBZ governor, we are done.”

Ncube said the government was now paying salaries on a cash basis, a position, which he pledged to stick to for the next two years.

“We are now spending what we have. We are determined that we need to carry on like that for the next two years. It should always be like that. We are living within our means,” he said.

“Our job now is to keep the tap closed and live within our means and not go into an overdraft facility.

“We have set a limit for ourselves at 5%, it should be 20%, but we want to keep it at 5%.We want independence of the central bank.

“We will keep our fiscal tap closed to make sure that as government we are not the source of growth of money,” he said.

He added that treasury was making progress with the International Monetary Fund in terms of concluding discussions around the staff-monitored programme.

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Mugabe slams Mnangagwa: ‘You can’t do without seeing dead bodies, what kind of a person are you?’

Former President Robert Mugabe has castigated his predecessor Emerson Mnangagwa for sending soldiers to brutalise protesting civilians. Mugabe was speaking at his Blue Roof mansion in Borrowdale where hundreds of invited guests were celebrating his 95t…

Former President Robert Mugabe has castigated his predecessor Emerson Mnangagwa for sending soldiers to brutalise protesting civilians. Mugabe was speaking at his Blue Roof mansion in Borrowdale where hundreds of invited guests were celebrating his 95th birthday. He said, “Vamwe vanofunga hukuru hunoreva kuponda vanhu, handizvo!” (Some believe being a leader entails murdering people, that’s […]