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‘Morbid symptoms’, threat of extended transition in Zim

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WHEN President Emmerson Mnangagwa took office in November 2017, he was largely seen as a transitional leader. This was not exactly a bad thing, it neither diminished his standing nor capacity.

His dual roles were to fix the economy and usher in a new political order that would see a break from the past, and in particular wash itself clean from the military that “assisted” the transition of that November.

He was supposed to carry Zimbabwe from the former President Robert Mugabe-era to somewhere beyond, and something new. Nobody exactly knew what would make up this new regime, but everyone was hopeful.

There were some hints of what this future could be. Mnangagwa could be the Deng Xiaoping of Zimbabwe, and this is a role that appeared to fit well, especially after his interview with Chinese broadcaster in 2015, where he sold himself as a single-minded reformist who knew what had to be done, and how.

He could be a Paul Kagame, a rising African doer of transition, exercising reforms with a strong hand, but with some practical results for business and international capital.

Or, he could be all of the above, plus his own man as an enforcer who honed skills under Mugabe for a period of nearly half a century.

The immediate task was to stabilise the country and usher in a new political culture just in time for the election in 2018.

Let us park for a while the fact that there were expectations in some quarters to usher in a consociationalism dispensation which would suspend elections for the period of transition. Mnangagwa could still have played a larger, magnanimous role in this scenario.

After the election in 2018, Mnangagwa was supposed to deepen the reform agenda, exert his character and chart the course for a more pronounced style of rule.

Unfortunately, two years after Mnangagwa took over, the transition in Zimbabwe looks unsure, and set to be long and extended, if not nightmarish at times.

The year 2019 closes like a line taken from the notebook of Antonio Gramsci wherein the old is dying but the new cannot be born, with manifestations of a myriad “morbid symptoms” in the interregnum. The political environment has just soured in Zimbabwe, with increasing polarity and dissent. The economy has spiralled down, with inflation galloping out of control, prices going mad while shortages of fuel and electricity have sapped the energy out of prospects for a turnaround.

There has been a crippling doctors strike, now beyond a world-record 100 days, which is emblematic of the breakdown of social services. Both the ruling party and the President appear not to have answers, which the just-ended annual conference failed to provide, either.

On the foreign policy front, Zimbabwe appears headed nowhere with the failure to make any meaningful traction in winning over foes or making friends happy.

The so-called re-engagement drive has not borne fruit, with the US having become more hostile and confrontational while, on the other hand, Zimbabwe’s bid to join the Commonwealth has had a tepid response.

China – the all-weather friend – stands by in reserved commitment, and sometimes frustrated annoyance, aware of the disappointing weaknesses of Zimbabwe.

Sadc provided the odd fillip by declaring solidarity against Western sanctions, but this failed on the continental level where the drive was not given legs.

Difficulties ahead

Things may become much more difficult in 2020. The preoccupation will be the economy and the rising political relations in the country.

The past year has shown us the failure of the economic experiment espoused by Mthuli Ncube, Mnangagwa’s Finance minister. The structural adjustment programmes prescribed by the Bretton Woods institutions have seen the usual conditions bear out: heavy taxation, social spending cuts, scrapping of subsidies, job cuts, borrowing caps, among others.

The measures have had the expected difficulties, which the administration in Harare often acknowledges, and justifies as necessary. On the other hand, the perfunctory social safety measures, especially the rollout of cheaper public transport, have been a drop in the ocean. Government has announced that it will phase out austerity to pave way for “prosperity”, but that appears to be unlikely because the modest gains such as cuts on spending and reduction of debt, have been severely undercut by inflation and other dislocative pressures.

Things have not been equal. It is difficult to fathom how the Finance minister, and by extension, the President, will turn the situation in this game and rules.

That is to say, in 2020 and beyond, Ncube will have to show cause why his policies and services can be retained, and how he can be useful if the President seeks to retain the support of the pauperised populace.

Threats, shadows and sideshows

With the difficulties such as those faced in 2018, it is quite easy for the leadership to find scapegoats. And quite honestly too, there are some difficulties that Zimbabwe currently faces because of the sanctions imposed on it by the West.

The sanctions, as well as continuing hostile attitudes especially by the US, will continue to gnaw at the economy and prospects for its recovery or any meaningful development.

Sanctions are an albatross around the neck of Zimbabwe — and no one except the US itself will do sh*t about it — forgive my language.

Perhaps this emboldened Tendai Biti a fortnight ago to write a not-so-cryptic tweet, a laconic parody of Oliver Mtukudzi’s song in which a hero is challenged to solve the family’s problems.

The President and the ruling party are feeling the heat.

A few weeks back, the party’s politburo stated that it would punish anyone “hobnobbing” with G40, a reference to members of the vanquished faction that supported the late former President Mugabe and a clique of younger politicians, including his wife Grace. It is believed that the faction is now coalescing around Saviour Kasukuwere.

I was dismissed from the State-linked Herald newspaper for meeting this “undesirable character in South Africa, last October.

Whether this — the alleged threat of G40 — is real or not is a question for another day. It is critical, though, to point out that raising the issue now is diversionary. It is a sideshow. A shadow. The G40 is hardly something that ordinary people are losing sleep over. The manifold challenges are well storied.

Go to any bar, street corner or social media and people will be talking about the cost of living, inflation and the energy crisis. The ruling party and the President will need to fix the economy and its unhelpful international relations.

A script gone wrong?

It is clear that something really horrible happened on the way to heaven, for an administration that had so much goodwill in 2017.

Foreign minister Sibusiso Moyo, the face of the 2017 military-assisted transition, just a fortnight ago admitted to foreign missions that the reforms and transformation Zimbabwe had envisioned had not gone according to plan.
This loss of virginity has been evidenced with the violent spatter of blood on the streets on two major occasions, on August 1, 2018 and mid-January 2019.

Violent confrontations are likely to occur as citizens protest the worsening conditions that are likely to obtain if there is no solution in sight.

There is the possibility of genuine, spontaneous uprisings and social upheaval resulting not from political grievances, but from pain of economic policies that are simply not working.

There is a precedence, too: wherever and whenever austerity measures have been instituted, social misery has followed and with it upheaval. Upheavals may go on and produce opposition movements and a formidable threat to the ruling party. Zimbabwe has already been down that road before.

Twenty years ago the opposition Movement for Democratic Change was born of similar conditions.

It may not be too fortuitous for yet another outfit to grow from this generation.

Confronting the national question

But creation or emergence of a new political party or movement, if it happens at all, is unlikely to be the biggest political development in 2020.

Rather, the answer to what may happen comes from how the Mnangagwa administration will handle the national question.

Indeed, the definition of national question is problematic and one can hazard a framework of what constitutes the national question — and Zimbabwe’s national question in 2020.
There are two major lenses to look at this. First, there is a political question of the opposition that has refused to endorse the leadership of Mnangagwa and calls him illegitimate. Never mind that the same opposition failed to prove electoral fraud in 2018. However, by their very nature political positions are more irrational that scientific.
So, the popular opposition and its supporters, home and abroad can still wave the legitimacy card. The continuous waving of this card — which is from an empirical perspective a huge lie — makes it an existential issue that cannot and will not be wished away.
The second lens to look at the national question is economic. This is more universal. There is overwhelming recognition that the country is suffering economically and that this administration has failed to address economic problems the country is facing.
The situation can actually get worse.
Overarching, there is an understanding that there is a link between the politics and the economics.
Many people like to point back to the era of the inclusive government, from 2009 to 2013, to show this correlation.
There! We have something like the national question.
It is now up to the movers and shakers to resolve this national question and this will be a huge call in 2020.
Four major scenarios emerge.
First, the President will allow for a berth of new talks with the main opposition, which will result in a possible power-sharing agreement. There are already movements to this effect. This will enable the President to remove the heat from himself and breath life, and fresh air, into the country.
Second, Mnangagwa will try and clamp down on rising dissent, cracking down on opposition while punishing his enemies within the ruling party on the basis of belonging to G40. He will use the fight against corruption to target political opponents. This will give him a sense of power and invincibility, but the tyranny will be enough to embolden his opponents while attracting negative attention from the world.
Thirdly, the ruling party, alarmed by the decline in its authority and leadership failure, will ramp up pressure on its leader to shape up or ship out. Zanu-PF now has this manual from two years back and it requires only a trigger. The more errant and authoritarian the President becomes according to the second scenario, the more likely a plot to oust him will emerge from the party and with the inevitable involvement of the army.
The fourth and last scenario is one in which the President works on a major re-configuration of his government and in particular Cabinet; fires half of his Cabinet and seeks a new administrative trajectory driven from his office as a centralised, State-led renaissance, mimicking Rwanda or the Asian Tigers. In this scenario, the President will have an eye on his own exit from the scene on a high score of having managed to modernise the country and manage its transition successfully. Those sympathetic to him, would probably want this best case scenario that may see the real craft-competent Mnangagwa stand up, do something and leave the scene just at the right time.
Extended transition?
Scenarios one and four appear to be the more desirable than two and three. However, the ruling party is more in character with the latter two.
In which case, the world must brace for more bad news from this corner of the Earth.
The hypothetical premise of this piece is the presupposition that the transition in Zimbabwe is likely to take longer than expected.
The latter scenarios make a perfect case for that.
Mnangagwa is already seeking political life beyond 2023. This means that if he doesn’t succeed in resolving the national question, things will be difficult in Zimbabwe.
It then sets the stage for another complexity in the transition that was supposed to take place in the immediate aftermath of Mugabe’s removal.
When matters come to a head, it means that the Head of State may be forced to step aside either before or just after 2023 to allow someone to complete the transition, which task comprises of finalising the task of sorting out the economy and usher in a new political dispensation.

 Tichaona Zindoga is an independent writer and communications consultant. He previously worked for The Herald as deputy and acting editor. Email: tichaona.zindoga@gmail.com

No Mr Easy for Madirirano

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BY WINSTONE ANTONIO

JAMAICAN dancehall singer Mr Easy has withdrawn from the annual Madirirano concert set for tomorrow at Alexandra Sports Club in Harare at the eleventh hour after his handlers, United Kingdom (UK)-based promoter Digital One Entertainment failed to agree with local promoter, Simbarashe “Simba Bodyslam” Chakare.

Bodyslam is the brains behind the Madirirano concert that has grown to be one of the biggest events on the local showbiz calendar.

Mr Easy, who was set to make his grand return to Harare after almost eight years as part of the partnership between Bodyslam and Digital One Entertainment, announced the cancellation of his performance through a video that has since gone viral on social media platforms.

“Yah, people of Zimbabwe, this is Mr Easy and I am here letting you know that I will be performing in Zimbabwe in the near future. I have no show in Zimbabwe this weekend. These are my suitcases, I am leaving South Africa back to the United Kingdom today (Wednesday) so those promoters promoting that Mr Easy will be in Zimbabwe are telling lies, they are not good they are fake,” he said.

One of Mr Easy’s handlers Kivo Santana of Digital One Entertainment told NewsDay Life & Style yesterday that the decision for the cancellation of Mr Easy’s performance was made after Bodyslam failed to meet their requirements.

“We had hoped to bring Mr Easy to Zimbabwe for the Digital One’s 20th anniversary celebrations after BodySlam had initially agreed that we partner with him as he was hosting the Madirirano festival, but when it was time to draft contracts, he started being evasive,” he said.

“We could not work with him (Bodyslam) without proper contracts so we decided to cancel everything as we felt the Madirirano partners wanted to use us.”

Contacted for comment, Bodyslam said they had learnt through social media that Mr Easy had cancelled his scheduled performance, adding that they were going ahead with the concert for the sake of their brand protection.

“I had no plans of doing Madirirano this year, until Digital One Entertainment, through Luther, who also hails from Highfield got in touch and persuaded me to host the event which is known to be a crowd puller. We agreed that we were to share everything that we were to get since they wanted the show to also save as part of their 20th anniversary celebrations and they would bring their Jamaican artiste Mr Easy to the show,” he said.

“I don’t have anything against them; my hands are clean. We are okay with what they have decided to do, we are going ahead with the concert without Mr Easy, but with our local artistes as has always been the norm. We had already paid for the venue, security, disco and some of the artistes. We are going to add one or two so that the line-up will pull through for a night,” he said.

Bodyslam said he was prepared to refund Digital One Entertainment the US$2 200 they had advanced to him for the payment of the public address system, some of the artistes, venue and security among other logistics if they feel they want the money back.

Man plunders deceased’s estate

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BY HARRIET CHIKANDIWA

A 51-YEAR-OLD man appeared in court yesterday facing charges of fraud after he allegedly sold properties belonging to his late brother worth US$263 930 and converted the money to personal use.

Nelson Tawanda Marimo appeared before Harare magistrate Victoria Mushamba, who remanded him to January 27, 2020 on $2 000 bail.

The complainant is the Master of the High Court, represented by senior assistant Master Simon Madi.

Sometime in May 2014, Simon Marimo and Jane Marimo, died leaving behind two minor children, a house in Chitungwiza, a stand in Mt Pleasant and other assets.

The State alleges that in October 2014, Marimo was appointed executor of the deceased’s estate under High Court DR 1421 and 1422/14, respectively.

Allegations are that without the knowledge and the consent of the Master of High Court, Marimo sold the Mt Pleasant stand for US$45 000 and converted the money to own use.

The court heard that Marimo misrepresented to Madi that he intended to pay school fees for the children and also to develop a stand in Chitungwiza, which already had a fully-built house.

Furthermore, Marimo received pension, insurance and terminal benefits pertaining to his late brother amounting to US$218 930 from the Midlands State University and Glens Removals, which he also allegedly converted to personal use.

Upon discovering the said offence, Madi made a report to the police, leading to Marimo’s arrest.

Mapeza walking on water

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FORMER Warriors coach Norman Mapeza is weaving his magic for South African Premier Soccer League side Chippa United, helping his side out of the relegation zone following a 1-0 victory away to Cape Town City on Saturday, which also stretched their unbeaten run to four matches.

BY TAWANDA TAFIRENYIKA

Mapeza took over the reins in October after the club parted ways with Clinton Larsen following a string of dreadful results. When the former FC Platinum coach took over, the club sat at the bottom of the table, with their future in the Absa Premiership looking doomed.

They were without a win from their first eight matches.

In the last four matches, Mapeza’s team registered a 2-0 victory away to AmaZulu, overcame Black Leopards 3-0 at home, drew 0-0 with Baroka before edging Cape Town City 1-0 in their own backyard on Saturday.

The Saturday result lifted them to 10th place on the league table with 14 points from 14 matches — representing a major improvement .

Several fans took to Twitter to shower praise on Mapeza for the way he has transformed Chippa United.

Next up for the former Monomotapa and FC Platinum coach is a showdown with fellow Zimbabwean coach Kaitano Tembo’s SuperSport United.

A few weeks after arriving at Chippa, Mapeza warned that the team would struggle because they don’t have the right players.

He said his side needed new faces as he could not perform miracles with the current crop of players.

“Things are going to be difficult here, we need to bring in new faces. It’s clear, we need to bring in new faces,” he said back in October.

“I have to be honest with you, I didn’t come here to perform miracles. I’m a football coach and I know this terrain. If things don’t go well for me, as a coach, you either resign or you get fired.
“But at the moment, we need players here. We need players. Each and every department — from up front, midfield, in defence.”

But as things look up for his team, Mapeza has been praising his charges of late for the hard work and commitment.

He is also proving wrong some of the people who doubted him like Sundowns coach Pitso Mosimane, who commented that Mapeza had not changed anything at Chippa United.

Mapeza walking on water

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FORMER Warriors coach Norman Mapeza is weaving his magic for South African Premier Soccer League side Chippa United, helping his side out of the relegation zone following a 1-0 victory away to Cape Town City on Saturday, which also stretched their unbeaten run to four matches.

BY TAWANDA TAFIRENYIKA

Mapeza took over the reins in October after the club parted ways with Clinton Larsen following a string of dreadful results. When the former FC Platinum coach took over, the club sat at the bottom of the table, with their future in the Absa Premiership looking doomed.

They were without a win from their first eight matches.

In the last four matches, Mapeza’s team registered a 2-0 victory away to AmaZulu, overcame Black Leopards 3-0 at home, drew 0-0 with Baroka before edging Cape Town City 1-0 in their own backyard on Saturday.

The Saturday result lifted them to 10th place on the league table with 14 points from 14 matches — representing a major improvement .

Several fans took to Twitter to shower praise on Mapeza for the way he has transformed Chippa United.

Next up for the former Monomotapa and FC Platinum coach is a showdown with fellow Zimbabwean coach Kaitano Tembo’s SuperSport United.

A few weeks after arriving at Chippa, Mapeza warned that the team would struggle because they don’t have the right players.

He said his side needed new faces as he could not perform miracles with the current crop of players.

“Things are going to be difficult here, we need to bring in new faces. It’s clear, we need to bring in new faces,” he said back in October.

“I have to be honest with you, I didn’t come here to perform miracles. I’m a football coach and I know this terrain. If things don’t go well for me, as a coach, you either resign or you get fired.
“But at the moment, we need players here. We need players. Each and every department — from up front, midfield, in defence.”

But as things look up for his team, Mapeza has been praising his charges of late for the hard work and commitment.

He is also proving wrong some of the people who doubted him like Sundowns coach Pitso Mosimane, who commented that Mapeza had not changed anything at Chippa United.

Customs officials spend weekend in slammer

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TWO female Zimbabwe Revenue Authority (Zimra) officials who spent the weekend in custody will today hear their bail ruling on a charge of criminal abuse of office.

BY STAFF REPORTER

Clarissa Zharare (47) and Constance Dzinotizei (36) on Friday appeared before Beitbridge provincial magistrate Perseverance Mhangala who did not ask them to plead.

Four other Zimra officers who are facing similar charges are out on bail.

The State is alleging that the two, while on duty on May 23 this year, endorsed false information to generate Customs Clearing Certificates for two Honda Fit cars belonging to Arkinson Madzivire and Thomas Mangere.

The information used to clear vehicles GD 11108035 and GD11209953 belonging to Madzivire and Mangere, respectively, had been used to clear two other vehicles and as a result no duty was paid, the State alleges.

Zharare and Dzinotizei, who are fairly senior officers, are accused of having corruptly entered the information.

They were arrested last week by Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission currently investigating the smuggling of 433 cars into the country through Beitbridge and Plumtree.

Customs officials spend weekend in slammer

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TWO female Zimbabwe Revenue Authority (Zimra) officials who spent the weekend in custody will today hear their bail ruling on a charge of criminal abuse of office.

BY STAFF REPORTER

Clarissa Zharare (47) and Constance Dzinotizei (36) on Friday appeared before Beitbridge provincial magistrate Perseverance Mhangala who did not ask them to plead.

Four other Zimra officers who are facing similar charges are out on bail.

The State is alleging that the two, while on duty on May 23 this year, endorsed false information to generate Customs Clearing Certificates for two Honda Fit cars belonging to Arkinson Madzivire and Thomas Mangere.

The information used to clear vehicles GD 11108035 and GD11209953 belonging to Madzivire and Mangere, respectively, had been used to clear two other vehicles and as a result no duty was paid, the State alleges.

Zharare and Dzinotizei, who are fairly senior officers, are accused of having corruptly entered the information.

They were arrested last week by Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission currently investigating the smuggling of 433 cars into the country through Beitbridge and Plumtree.

PSL frontrunners’ contrasting worries

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The Herald

Tadious Manyepo Sports Reporter
LOG leaders CAPS United and their closest title contestants FC Platinum have every reason to scratch their heads ahead of the penultimate round of the Castle Lager Premiership football championship race on Wednesday.

The Green Machine lead the race on 58 points, two ahead of the Zvishavane miners with two games to go before the curtain comes down on the season.

Makepekepe face Ngezi Platinum Stars at Baobab on Wednesday, the same day that FC Platinum host Black Rhinos at Mandava.

But both sides have to find a way to overcome their distinct problems before plunging into their respective tricky yet crunch fixtures.

The Zvishavane team haven’t had a productive week in their CAF Champions league journey after suffering some back-to-back defeats in their opening two games.

FC Platinum lost 1-2 to Al-Hilal of Sudan in Khartoum last week before they were put to the guillotine by Tunisian giants Etoile du Sahel, losing 0-3 at Barbourfields on Saturday.

“We will have to work very hard to restore confidence in the team. We have been losing in the CAF Champions League and we don’t have to let that trend to affect us. We need to psyche up the players ahead of our league match against Black Rhinos on Wednesday,” said Lizwe Sweswe, the FC Platinum coach.

He said it will take some great deal of effort to restore confidence in his charges who looked so much confused against Etoile du Sahel.

“Of course, our own local league is different from the CAF Champions League but results from either can impact on your performance in the other. We need to quickly regroup and refocus for the Black Rhinos match.”

Sweswe fears fatigue could as well affect his troops who had to make it to Zvishavane after their weekend game in Bulawayo.
While Sweswe is battling to psyche up his players, his CAPS United opposite number Darlington Dodo has been dealt a blow after Valentine Musarurwa picked an injury at training.

The reliable defender might miss Wednesday’s game against Ngezi Platinum Stars and Dodo will have to be shrewd when picking his cards.

Spencer Masunda has been the natural replacement but he is also injury prone. If anything, he had to be stretchered off the field in CAPS United’s last game against Dynamos.

Valentine Ndaba is good offensively but vulnerable in defensive duties while Carlos Rusere is more or less the same with the former.

“We have not been so lucky in terms of retaining a fit squad this season. But this is the period of the season in which one would need a full complement of the squad,” said Dodo.

“Valentine Musarurwa is a key member of the team and you don’t want to miss him in an important game like the one on Wednesday. But we will have to do everything that we ought to do to win it.”

Makepekepe can win the title if they bag the maximum points against Ngezi Platinum Stars while FC Platinum lose to Black Rhinos.

If that doesn’t happen, well, the two sides meet in what will be an explosive decider at the National Sports Stadium on Saturday.

Mzansi stars to headline concert

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BY WINSTONE ANTONIO

CELEBRATED South African artistes AKA, Distruction Boyz and Naak Musiq will headline the much-awaited DJ Stavo and Friends Concert set for December 21 at Wood Sensation Club located at LongCheng Plaza in Belvedere, Harare.

The concert, which is meant to celebrate unity among artistes, is the brainchild of local award-winning wheel spinner, Steven “DJ Stavo” Sanders (pictured).

One of the concert organisers, Dee Nosh, yesterday said music had the power to unite different nationalities.

“The DJ Stavo and Friends is a concert that is meant to further promote local talent that we feel should go global. Having international acts to support the show is to send a message out there that we are all one,” he said.

“A wheelspinner is not aligned to a specific genre of music, hence the reason why Wood Sensation Club is aligned with one of the best brands in the country Steven ‘DJ Stavo’ Sanders.”

Dee Nosh said the concert was going to be an annual event and would have DJ Stavo and his local and regional friends joining forces to bring entertainment to music enthusiasts.

“Through this initiative DJ Stavo seeks to continue building networks with fellow artistes beyond the borders,” he said.

Dee Nosh said the early bird tickets for the concert started selling on the online platform clicknpay.africa and at MyCash outlets on Monday at US$5 and VIP US$20 or equivalent to local currency.

The Mzansi stars will share the stage with local artistes Winky D, DJ Stavo, ExQ, Nutty O, Tamy Moyo, Canada based wheel-spinner TK Smoothe, Dee Nosh, Asaph, Hillzy, Ash Stylez & Nivek, Twitty, Storm and Bryan K.

Vela sues Nssa boss, claims $5m for defamation

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By CHARLES LAITON

FORMER National Social Security Authority (Nssa) chairperson Robin Vela has filed a $5 million lawsuit against his successor, Cuthbert Chidoori, for allegedly causing the publication of a story claiming that the parastatal was losing more pensioners’ money as a result of his actions.

Vela is demanding $2,5 million from Chidoori and another $2,5 million from The Herald following publication of a story implicating him on November 18 this year.

In the summons filed on Tuesday this week, Vela is also suing Zimbabwe Newspapers (1980)Limited as co-respondents.

The former Nssa board chair said the article by The Herald, as quoted verbatim was false, defamatory and misleading.

“The Herald article quoted verbatim an assortment of defamatory, false and misleading allegations made by the defendant (Chidoori) in respect of the predecessor board of directors of the National Social Security Authority (Nssa), which was chaired by the plaintiff (Vela),” he said through his lawyers, Chambati, Mataka and Makonese Attorneys at Law.

“He (Chidoori) said that Nssa made questionable investments under the watch of the plaintiff’s board, which questionable investments prejudiced the interests of the pensioners.
Chidoori said as a direct result of the questionable investments, the then Minister of Public Service, Labour and Social Welfare, Petronella Kagonye, in February 2018 imposed a moratorium on investment, which moratorium resulted in the value of US$150 million in cash holdings being eroded by inflation.”

Vela further said Chidoori also accused him of “not executing due diligence” prior to making certain investments and that resulted in loss on some investments.

The former Nssa chair also said he was suing Chidoori for allegedly claiming that massive irregularities, some of which have turned out to be outright criminal, were perpetrated at Nssa while his board was in charge.

“He said that during the tenure of Vela’s board, there were five key areas beset with serious irregularities namely information and communication technology, properties, investments, human resources and corporate governance. That during the tenure of Vela’s board, a forensic report revealed that organisations and individuals within and outside Nssa plundered resources,” Vela’s lawyers said.

Vela also said on November 25 this year, The Herald again published an article titled Nssa saddled with bills over idle ICT system.

The article allegedly insinuated that Vela’s board procured an information technology system from Twenty Third Century Systems (TTCS) for US$10,4 million which ICT system worked just for two years and is now lying idle.

“His (Vela) reputation in commercial circles as an outstanding man of probity both locally and abroad has been decimated,” the lawyers said.
The respondents are yet to respond.