Extremely happy Thokozani Khupe and Lovemore Madhuku had this to say after attending State House meeting

Political parties that fielded presidential candidates in the July 30, 2018 harmonised elections yesterday met at State House in Harare and committed themselves to the principle of dialogue and working together to resolve the challenges facing the coun…

Political parties that fielded presidential candidates in the July 30, 2018 harmonised elections yesterday met at State House in Harare and committed themselves to the principle of dialogue and working together to resolve the challenges facing the country. Out of the 23 parties that fielded presidential candidates in the internationally-observed harmonised elections, 21 were represented. […]

Parly seeks industry revival

Source: Parly seeks industry revival | Herald (Business) Africa Moyo Senior Business Reporter The Parliamentary Portfolio Committee on Industry and Commerce has begun visiting the country’s manufacturing sector to appreciate the challenges it contends with, so as to prod Government to intervene with matching solutions. This was said by the Portfolio Committee’s chairperson Mr Joshua […]

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Source: Parly seeks industry revival | Herald (Business)

Africa Moyo Senior Business Reporter
The Parliamentary Portfolio Committee on Industry and Commerce has begun visiting the country’s manufacturing sector to appreciate the challenges it contends with, so as to prod Government to intervene with matching solutions.

This was said by the Portfolio Committee’s chairperson Mr Joshua Sacco in an interview with The Herald Business in Harare yesterday after touring Dairibord Zimbabwe Limited (DZL)’s Rekayi Tangwena plant.

The initiative comes at a time when the Ministry of Industry and Commerce is also touring companies that were destroyed and/ or looted during the January 14 to 16 violent demonstration instigated by the MDC Alliance and its partners in the NGO and civic sectors, to establish the quantum of assistance required by the affected firms so that they can be capacitated.

Mr Sacco said the Portfolio Committee’s tours will start by focusing on the food industry, before being extended to other sectors.

Said Mr Sacco: “As the Committee on Industry and Commerce, we have resolved to visit industries in different sectors. So we have started with the food industry, we have done Dairibord today, just to understand the challenges and the direction which they are going and how Government can also come in to facilitate an environment which is conducive for them especially around issues of producing local products in Zimbabwe.

“We are very proud of Dairibord as a Zimbabwean company so I am happy to say at least we are happy with what we have seen and I think it’s now issues around the value chain, improving the supply of the raw materials, which is milk in this case. So the industry can definitely expand.”

DZL chief executive officer Anthony Mandiwanza, told the parliamentarians that the company, which has a market capitalisation of $62 million, is being hampered by a number of challenges principally the decline in national milk production.

Due to the shortage of milk, a key raw material for their business, DZL has mothballed operations at its Bulawayo, Gweru and Kadoma plants, while the Chitungwiza plant has moved to making maheu.

Milk production sharply declined from 260 million litres in 1999 to 39 million litres in 2009.

Said Mr Mandiwanza: “By the year 2008 into 2009, milk production had dropped from the peak of 260 million litres to 39 million litres.

“Thank goodness that we as Dairibord Zimbabwe had developed our footprint into the areas of food and beverages, so we survived.”

Worryingly, milk production declined at a time when the sector had been deregulated, and now boasts of over 15 players.

During the time of high production in the ‘90s, there were only two milk processors; Dairy Marketing Board (DMB) and Nestle Zimbabwe, with DMB consuming 90 percent of the milk.

Mr Mandiwanza said the diminishing milk production base comes against a backdrop of Government — previously a shareholder in DZL — having had invested significantly in infrastructure such as a brand new dairy in Bulawayo, a completely refurbished dairy plant in Gweru and a cheese making plant in Kadoma.

The new plant and equipment at the Harare plant was producing ice-cream, yoghurts; with the Chitungwiza plant having been designed for 300 000 litres of milk per day.

“We had massive excessive infrastructure against a diminishing milk supply base, to the extent that the national milk production had dropped to 39 million litre by 2009, and with many others having come on board.

“So, today as we are talking, there are only two major processors who have remained on two feet (and) the demand for milk as at last year is 120 million litres (per annum) and the supply side is 70 million litres, which means a deficit of 50 million litres.

“Now, when you have a deficit of 50 million litres, you ought to ask the question, ‘so what is happening between the demand and the supply?’” said Mr Mandiwanza.

He said the industry has been furiously importing powder and butter into the country at a cost of $7 million a month.

“This is a very important issue for your Committee . . . which then speaks about the competitiveness of that industry going forward.

“When you have a demand or supply gap that is being plugged by importation of powdered milk, it means the country is consuming foreign currency and yet you have got scarcity in foreign currency,” said Mr Mandiwanza.

The dairy sector is spending $7 million per month, which could be more given that some unregistered firms could be importing too, at a time the ability to export and earn in foreign currency has disappeared due to low milk production.

Mr Mandiwanza said foreign firms are sending their products to Zimbabwe due to the attractiveness of the US dollar, which when converted in other countries, fetches more.

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Zimbabwe’s opposition MDC snubs Mnangagwa talks, wants outside mediator 

Source: Zimbabwe’s opposition MDC snubs Mnangagwa talks, wants outside mediator | Reuters HARARE (Reuters) – Zimbabwe’s main opposition on Wednesday snubbed talks with President Emmerson Mnangagwa meant to try resolve a political and economic crisis, saying any dialogue with the president must be brokered by an independent outside mediator. Mnangagwa, who is under pressure over […]

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Source: Zimbabwe’s opposition MDC snubs Mnangagwa talks, wants outside mediator | Reuters

Zimbabwe’s President Emmerson Mnangagwa arrives for talks with leaders of opposition parties in Harare, Zimbabwe, February 6, 2019, REUTERS/Philimon Bulawayo

HARARE (Reuters) – Zimbabwe’s main opposition on Wednesday snubbed talks with President Emmerson Mnangagwa meant to try resolve a political and economic crisis, saying any dialogue with the president must be brokered by an independent outside mediator.

Mnangagwa, who is under pressure over the deteriorating economy and a crackdown on anti-government protests last month, invited 23 opposition leaders to a meeting to draw up terms for national dialogue.

The Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), said it would take part in the talks only if they were held under the supervision of the United Nations, African Union or regional bloc Southern African Development Community.

“The MDC’s position is that the dialogue process must be convened by an independent mediator and not one of the disputants,” the MDC said in a letter responding to Mnangagwa’s invitation to the talks.

The MDC has said Zimbabwe’s problems stemmed from last year’s presidential vote. Mnangagwa won but MDC accused his side of rigging the results, which he denies.

Joice Mujuru, an opposition leader and former vice president to Robert Mugabe, also did not attend the meeting although other smaller parties met Mnangagwa at state house offices in Harare.

In a speech before the talks, Mnangagwa said his opponents should accept his election win, and he urged them to call for the removal of U.S. sanctions on ruling party and government officials.

“Peace can never be imposed from outside but must issue from within our own society,” Mnangagwa said, in an apparent reference to the MDC demand for an outside mediator.

Zimbabwe has held disputed elections since 2000, which coincided with an economic recession, but in 2009 the ruling ZANU-PF party and the MDC formed a unity government, which ushered economic and political stability.

Last July’s vote, the first since Mugabe was forced to resign after a coup in 2017, was seen as an opportunity to pull Zimbabwe out of its diplomatic isolation and prompting an economic recovery. Instead, the vote left the nation polarised.

Rights groups and witnesses say armed men in police and army uniform have continued to make night raids at homes of opposition activists where they beat up occupants, a charge denied by security forces.

A video surfaced this week of a soldier beating women at a house in a Harare township while another man held a pistol and frogmarched three young men.

Army’s Major General Nyikayaramba told reporters that the army used proportionate force against protesters and that no one had reported rights abuses against the military.

The Zimbabwe Human Rights NGO forum said on Wednesday that 17 people had died since the mid-January protests although police still insist three people were killed.

In Harare, a strike for better pay by public sector teachers entered its second day as some stayed at home while others attended school but did not teach, with unions accusing security agents of intimidation.

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Striking Zimbabwean teachers earn equivalent of just R700 a month

Teachers in Zimbabwe, who say their salaries are now so eroded they cannot afford to buy groceries or pay for school fees for their own children, are on the second day of a go-slow in protest against hyper-inflation. Source: Striking Zimbabwean teachers earn equivalent of just R700 a month – Times Live The call for […]

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Teachers in Zimbabwe, who say their salaries are now so eroded they cannot afford to buy groceries or pay for school fees for their own children, are on the second day of a go-slow in protest against hyper-inflation.

Source: Striking Zimbabwean teachers earn equivalent of just R700 a month – Times Live

The call for a nationwide teachers' strike in Zimbabwe has been met with mixed results. The country has 20,000 trained teachers currently out of work.

The call for a nationwide teachers’ strike in Zimbabwe has been met with mixed results. The country has 20,000 trained teachers currently out of work. 
Image: 123RF/Dglimages

 

Zimbabwe Teachers’ Association (Zimta) president Richard Gundane said the strike was the culmination of the government’s continued disregard of their welfare.

“This strike has nothing to do with political activities. This is confined to labour issues, industrial issues that come as a result of the salaries that have been eroded by inflation that was caused by the separation of the US dollar from the RTGS (real-time gross settlement), which denominates our salaries,” he said.

The main issue raised by the teachers is that their salaries have been eroded to $2.50 a day (roughly R700 a month) – not enough for a typical family to survive.

The industrial action’s effectiveness has been patchy. At both government- and church-run boarding schools across the country, some teachers stayed at home while others clocked in but didn’t attend classes.

Zimta chief executive officer Sifiso Ndlovu said there had been a huge response to the call for industrial action, mostly in the southern parts of the country. “The response in Matabeleland (north and south) as well as Bulawayo sent a clear message. We see the strike gathering momentum in the coming days,” he said.

Only student teachers and temporary teachers reported for duty in these areas.

The Progressive Teachers’ Union of Zimbabwe (PTUZ) said teachers in rural areas were being intimidated, with roving Zanu-PF youths demanding names of teachers who didn’t turn up for work on Tuesday when the strike started.

“Youths and other political party functionaries are visiting schools and demanding names of teachers absent from schools,” said PTUZ president Takavafira Zhou.

The teachers’ strike found support from the public as some parents in some parts of the country did not send their children to school. “Some parents in Bulawayo went to withdraw their children from school, saying teachers were on strike,” said Bulawayo provincial education director Olicah Kaira.

In Harare, most teachers reported for duty but joined the go-slow – largely because the Apex Council, the main public sector workers’ union, is against the move by the two teachers’ representative bodies, the PTUZ and Zimta.

Apex Council leadership visited schools in the capital, begging teachers to keep discussions open. “We have been going around the schools to see if our members have heeded our call to give dialogue a chance and I can report that it was business as usual in our schools,” said organising secretary Charles Chinosengwa.

Meanwhile, the Public Service Commission (PSC) said the country had 20,000 trained teachers currently out of work. Some have not been employed since graduating up to six years ago.

However, there is also a shortage of at least 2,000 teachers in each of the country’s 10 provinces, ranging from early childhood development (ECD) up to advanced level, where there is a pressing shortage of mathematics and science teachers in particular.

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Chigumba is chief election fraudster: Komichi

Source: Chigumba is chief election fraudster: Komichi | Newsday (News) BY DESMOND CHINGARANDE MDC vice-president Morgan Komichi yesterday singled out Zimbabwe Electoral Commission chairperson Justice Priscilla Chigumba as the main elections fraudster and alleged that other commissioners were even surprised with the results she announced for the 2018 presidential election. Komichi, who was leading evidence […]

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Source: Chigumba is chief election fraudster: Komichi | Newsday (News)

BY DESMOND CHINGARANDE

MDC vice-president Morgan Komichi yesterday singled out Zimbabwe Electoral Commission chairperson Justice Priscilla Chigumba as the main elections fraudster and alleged that other commissioners were even surprised with the results she announced for the 2018 presidential election.

Komichi, who was leading evidence during cross-examination by his lawyer Obey Shava, told the court that as chief election agents of various political parties, they were in constant communication with Zec acting chief elections officer Utoile Silaigwana.

But he alleged Chigumba was in another room at the Harare International Conference Centre (HICC) doctoring figures of the elections with the help of other people he described as “boys”.

“Our relationship with Zec had been okay in the past despite not approving their figures. We have been working well as chief election agents of MDC with the former Zec elections officer Lovemore Sekeramayi, Justice George Chiweshe, Justice Rita Makarau and Silaigwana. When we had a problem, we would come to Zec and if we found them in a meeting, they would adjourn the meeting and attend to us in the past. We had a relationship of brothers,” Komichi said.

“But things started to change when Chigumba took over. She would tell us she is busy, especially to us MDC members. Even other commissioners like Silaigwana who were apprising us of the developments during the announcement of the results did not know the programme of events.

“Silaigwana honestly told us that the presidential results would be announced after verification was done and he took us to a room where there was a television. We were surprised when we came back in the announcement room and found Chigumba already announcing the presidential results. We waited for her to conclude and she announced her fake results of nine provinces and I did not interrupt her.”

Komichi said during the break, he then addressed the gathering, telling them to disregard the results because they were “fake”.

He insisted that what he did was not illegal because he waited for the commissioners to announce their fake results.

Komichi was asked by prosecutor Michael Reza what the court would do if someone from the gallery started shouting in court in the middle of proceedings. Komichi replied that Reza’s example did not resemble what he did.

“Your Worship, there is a clear example where the prosecutor, Reza, was nearly choked by Tendai Biti in court during the adjournment of the case, and the newspapers reported of the incident. But Biti was never arrested because it was an adjournment. Your Worship was not in court, that’s why he was not arrested,” Komichi responded.

He said he was vindicated that Zec was announcing fake results after the body announced three different sets of presidential results after the incident.

Four witnesses testified in the case and the State closed its case, but the court dismissed Komichi’s application for discharge, saying he had a case to answer and must be put to his defence.

Komichi is expected to call his witnesses.

The post Chigumba is chief election fraudster: Komichi appeared first on NewsDay Zimbabwe.

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